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LetterLETTER
Open Access

A Comparison of Chest Radiograph and CTA Apical Pulmonary Findings in Patients Presenting with Suspected Acute Stroke during the COVID-19 Pandemic

J. Siddiqui, F. Bala, S. Sciacca, A.M. Falzon, M. Benger, S.A. Matloob, F.N.A.C. Miller, R.J. Simister, I. Chatterjee, L.K. Sztriha, I. Davagnanam and T.C. Booth
American Journal of Neuroradiology December 2020, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A6940
J. Siddiqui
aDepartment of NeuroradiologyKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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F. Bala
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S. Sciacca
bLysholm Department of NeuroradiologyNational Hospital for Neurology and NeurosurgeryUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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A.M. Falzon
bLysholm Department of NeuroradiologyNational Hospital for Neurology and NeurosurgeryUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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M. Benger
cDepartment of NeurologyKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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S.A. Matloob
dDepartment of NeurosurgeryNational Hospital for Neurology and NeurosurgeryUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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F.N.A.C. Miller
eDepartment of RadiologyKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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R.J. Simister
fComprehensive Stroke ServiceUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
gStroke Research CentreUniversity College London Queen Square Institute of NeurologyLondon, UK
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I. Chatterjee
hComprehensive Stroke ServiceUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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L.K. Sztriha
iDepartment of NeurologyKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
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I. Davagnanam
jLysholm Department of NeuroradiologyNational Hospital for Neurology and NeurosurgeryUniversity College London Hospitals NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
kBrain Repair & Rehabilitation UnitUniversity College London Queen Square Institute of NeurologyLondon, UK
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T.C. Booth
lDepartment of NeuroradiologyKing’s College Hospital NHS Foundation TrustLondon, UK
mSchool of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging SciencesKing’s College LondonLondon, UK
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In conjunction with our recently published article entitled “COVID-19 Stroke Apical Lung Examination Study: A Diagnostic and Prognostic Imaging Biomarker in Suspected Acute Stroke,”1 the authors are pleased to also report our supplementary findings related to chest radiographs.

In our search for relevant diagnostic biomarkers within the lung apices on CTA performed in patients presenting with acute stroke, we also determined whether the chest radiograph is a reliable diagnostic imaging biomarker and how it compared with CTA-derived reliable diagnostic imaging biomarkers.

Chest radiographs are routine investigations for patients admitted with both suspected stroke and suspected coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). The investigation is often available to a neuroradiologist when reviewing the CTA. In the setting of a neuroradiology department, we wished to determine whether the chest radiograph is a reliable diagnostic imaging biomarker (using the British Society of Thoracic Imaging COVID-19 Radiology Guidance; https://www.bsti.org.uk/standards-clinical-guidelines/clinical-guidelines/covid-19-bsti-statement-and-guidance/) and how it compares with CTA-derived reliable diagnostic imaging biomarkers.

Anterior-posterior or posterior-anterior chest radiographs, if obtained within 6 hours of the CTA, were evaluated at the 3 sites included in our multicenter study in adult patients also undergoing CT of the head and craniocervical CTA as acute stroke investigations. Radiographs were acquired with standard techniques using digital radiography machines GC80 (Samsung), Discovery 656 (GE Healthcare), Multix Select (Siemens Healthineers), and Diagnost (Philips Healthcare).

Eighty-seven patients had a chest radiograph within 6 hours of the CTA; 55.2% (48/87) had normal findings; 13.8% (12/87) were COVID-19-typical; 26.4% (23/87) had indeterminate findings; and 4.6% (4/87) were non-COVID-19. By means of a descriptive COVID-19 chest radiograph grading system, the interrater reliability among the 4 neuroradiologist raters was “substantial” across the study (Fleiss κ  = 0.73; 95% CI, 0.62–0.84). Shown to be reliable, we then determined the diagnostic accuracy of this chest radiograph imaging biomarker for Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) using the reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test as the reference standard (Table). Fifty-nine patients had both SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR results and a chest radiograph. All measures of diagnostic accuracy of the chest radiograph were inferior to our selected CTA-derived reliable diagnostic imaging biomarkers.

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Diagnostic accuracy of chest radiograph and CTA features in patients who had undergone both a chest radiograph and a SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR test (n = 59)

Chest radiographs are routine investigations for those admitted with suspected stroke and those admitted with suspected COVID-19. In the setting of a neuroradiology department, while a descriptive chest radiograph grading system proved reliable, it was not an accurate COVID-19 diagnostic biomarker in the cohort of patients undergoing immediate CTA for suspected stroke, in contrast to the reliable diagnostic biomarkers identified in the CTA apical assessment.

Chest radiographs had a much lower diagnostic performance than all CTA biomarkers with a sensitivity of 50% (95% CI, 29–71) and a specificity of 61% (95% CI, 46–74) for COVID-19 (Table). We showed that chest radiograph assessment should not, therefore, replace a simple assessment of the presence of ground glass opacification on CTA for COVID-19.

Given the high frequency of chest radiographs as a screening investigation, particularly in the current era, with the additional prothrombotic sequalae of COVID-19, the findings are highly relevant to both emergency radiologists and neuroradiologists reporting acute stroke studies. Data pertaining to chest radiographs and COVID-19 in the acute stroke population have not been previously reported.

Footnotes

  • This work was supported by the Wellcome/Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council Center for Medical Engineering (WT 203148/Z/16/Z).

Indicates open access to non-subscribers at www.ajnr.org

Reference

  1. 1.↵
    1. Siddiqui J,
    2. Bala F,
    3. Sciacca S, et al
    . COVID-19 stroke apical lung examination study: a diagnostic and prognostic imaging biomarker in suspected acute stroke. AJNR Am J Neuroradiol 2020 Sept 17. [Epub ahead of print] doi:10.3174/ajnr.A6832 pmid:32943416
    Abstract/FREE Full Text
  • © 2021 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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A Comparison of Chest Radiograph and CTA Apical Pulmonary Findings in Patients Presenting with Suspected Acute Stroke during the COVID-19 Pandemic
J. Siddiqui, F. Bala, S. Sciacca, A.M. Falzon, M. Benger, S.A. Matloob, F.N.A.C. Miller, R.J. Simister, I. Chatterjee, L.K. Sztriha, I. Davagnanam, T.C. Booth
American Journal of Neuroradiology Dec 2020, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6940

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A Comparison of Chest Radiograph and CTA Apical Pulmonary Findings in Patients Presenting with Suspected Acute Stroke during the COVID-19 Pandemic
J. Siddiqui, F. Bala, S. Sciacca, A.M. Falzon, M. Benger, S.A. Matloob, F.N.A.C. Miller, R.J. Simister, I. Chatterjee, L.K. Sztriha, I. Davagnanam, T.C. Booth
American Journal of Neuroradiology Dec 2020, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A6940
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