Frequency of slight interstitial lung lesions in coronavirus disease 2019 autopsy cases - potential risk factor of severe pneumonia

Author:

Iwashita Hiromichi1,Kawabata Yoshinori2,Hayashi Hiroyuki3,Matsushita Shoichiro4,Yamashiro Tsuneo4,Matsumura Mai1,Yoshimura Yukihiro3,Kataoka Toshiaki1,Mitsui Hideaki1,Suzuki Takehisa1,Misumi Toshihiro5,Tanaka Tomonori6,Ishijima Sosuke7,Fukuoka Junya7,Iwasawa Tae8,Ogura Takashi8,Okudela Koji1

Affiliation:

1. Yokohama City University

2. Saitama Prefectural Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center

3. Yokohama Municipal Citizen’s Hospital

4. Yokohama City University Hospital

5. Yokohama City University School of Medicine

6. Kobe University Hospital

7. Nagasaki University Graduate School of Biomedical Sciences

8. Kanagawa Cardiovascular and Respiratory Center

Abstract

Abstract The aim of this study was to clarify subclinical hidden interstitial lung disease (ILD) as a risk factor of severe pneumonia associated with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). We carefully examined autopsied lungs and chest computed tomography scanning (CT) images from patients with COVID-19 for interstitial lesions and then analyzed their relationship with disease severity. Among the autopsy series, subclinical ILD was found in 13/27 cases (48%) in the COVID-19 group, and in contrast, 8/65 (12%) in the control autopsy group (p=0.0006; Fisher’s exact test). We reviewed CT images from the COVID-19 autopsy cases and verified that subclinical ILD was histologically detectable in the CT images. Then, we retrospectively examined CT images from another series of COVID-19 cases in the Yokohama, Japan area between February–August 2020 for interstitial lesions and analyzed the relationship to the severity of COVID-19 pneumonia. Interstitial lesion was more frequently found in the group with the moderate II/severe disease than in the moderate I/mild disease (severity was evaluated according to the COVID-19 severity classification system of the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare [Japan]) (moderate II/severe, 11/15, 73.3% versus moderate I/mild, 108/245, 44.1%; Fisher exact test, p=0.0333). In conclusion, it was suggested that subclinical ILD could be an important risk factor for severe COVID-19 pneumonia. A benefit of these findings could be the development of a risk assessment system using high resolution CT images for fatal COVID-19 pneumonia.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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