Lung Ultrasound for Identification of Patients Requiring Invasive Mechanical Ventilation in COVID-19.

Seiler C, Klingberg C, Hårdstedt M

J Ultrasound Med - (-) - [2021-01-26; online 2021-01-26]

Indication for invasive mechanical ventilation in COVID-19 pneumonia has been a major challenge. This study aimed to evaluate if lung ultrasound (LUS) can assist identification of requirement of invasive mechanical ventilation in moderate to severe COVID-19 pneumonia. Between April 23 and November 12, 2020, hospitalized patients with moderate to severe COVID-19 (oxygen demand ≥4 L/min) were included consecutively. Lung ultrasound was performed daily until invasive mechanical ventilation (IMV-group) or spontaneous recovery (non-IMV-group). Clinical parameters and lung ultrasound findings were compared between groups, at intubation (IMV-group) and highest oxygen demand (non-IMV-group). A reference group with oxygen demand <4 L/min was examined at hospital admission. Altogether 72 patients were included: 50 study patients (IMV-group, n = 23; non-IMV-group, n = 27) and 22 reference patients. LUS-score correlated to oxygen demand (SpO 2 /FiO2 -ratio) (r = 0.728; p < 0.0001) and was higher in the IMV-group compared to the non-IMV-group (20.0 versus 18.0; p = 0.026). Based on receiver operating characteristic analysis, a LUS-score of 19.5 was identified as cut-off for requirement of invasive mechanical ventilation (area under the curve 0.68; sensitivity 56%, specificity 74%). In 6 patients, LUS identified critical coexisting conditions. Respiratory rate and oxygenation index ((SpO2 /FiO2 )/respiratory rate) ≥4.88 identified no requirement of invasive mechanical ventilation with a positive predictive value of 87% and negative predictive value of 100%. LUS-score had only a moderate diagnostic value for requirement of invasive mechanical ventilation in moderate to severe COVID-19. However, LUS proved valuable as complement to respiratory parameters in guidance of disease severity and identifying critical coexisting conditions.

Category: Health

Type: Journal article

PubMed 33496362

DOI 10.1002/jum.15617

Crossref 10.1002/jum.15617


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