Covid19 Clinical Trial
Official title:
Risk Factors, Prognosis and Findings by Computed Tomography in Patients Infected by COVID-19 and Its Association With Severity.
In the SARS-CoV2 pandemic, imaging studies proved its diagnostic utility to determine the
severity of lung involvement. Computed tomography (CT) is a state-of-the-art study proven to
be a highly sensitive diagnostic test complemented by RT-PCR testing to determine the disease
and the degree of severity.
In March 2020, the Dutch Society of Radiology developed a standardized assessment scheme for
COVID-19 lung disease, called CO-RADS. This system proposes a level of suspicion of pulmonary
involvement of COVID-19, based on the simple chest tomography findings. The level of
suspicion ranges from very low (CO-RADS 1) to very high (CO-RADS 5), with two additional
categories involving a technically deficient study (CO-RADS 0) and a positive RT-PCR test for
SARS -CoV-2 known before tomography (CO-RADS 6).
For its part, acute respiratory damage secondary to SARS-COV2 pneumonia causes acute
respiratory distress syndrome, which warrants immediate medical attention. During the
evaluation and triage of patients with suspected or confirmed SARS-COV2 infection, it is a
challenge for health personnel given that the severity and clinical presentation is highly
variable. The patient's risk stratification is carried out using previously established and
validated risk scales and is a fundamental tool for making clinical decisions. Some of the
risk indices and scales have been developed and used in the pandemic epicenters, such as
China and Europe. Useful for the clinician is the national early warning scale (NEWS 2),
severe disease risk assessment score (COVID-GRAM), the rapid severity index for COVID-19
(qCSI), evaluation score of Modified sequential organ failure (mSOFA), the sepsis-induced
coagulopathy score (SIC), the ROX index as a predictor of success to the high-flow nasal
cannula. The evaluation of the risk of thrombotic complications such as the Padua risk, of
cardiac complications such as QT segment prolongation, through the Tisdale risk score.
Risk stratification is essential in the current COVID-19 pandemic situation; upon admission,
the clinician will discern if the patient requires in-hospital medical treatment, the risk of
severe disease, and progression to assisted mechanical ventilation.
This work aims to establish whether the severity of the findings identified by cardiac
tomography upon admission and the risk established by the different established prognostic
indices.
Introduction
In the SARS-CoV2 pandemic, imaging studies proved its diagnostic utility to determine the
severity of lung involvement. Computed tomography (CT) is a state-of-the-art study proven to
be a highly sensitive diagnostic test complemented by RT-PCR testing to determine the disease
and the degree of severity.
In March 2020, the Dutch Society of Radiology developed a standardized assessment scheme for
COVID-19 lung disease, called CO-RADS. This system proposes a level of suspicion of pulmonary
involvement of COVID-19, based on the simple chest tomography findings. The level of
suspicion ranges from very low (CO-RADS 1) to very high (CO-RADS 5), with two additional
categories involving a technically deficient study (CO-RADS 0) and a positive RT-PCR test for
SARS -CoV-2 known before tomography (CO-RADS 6).
Acute respiratory damage secondary to SARS-COV2 pneumonia causes acute respiratory distress
syndrome, which must meet the Berlin criteria. The evaluation and triage of patients with
suspected or confirmed SARS-COV2 infection is a challenge for emerging healthcare systems.
The risk stratification of the patient is carried out with previously established and
validated risk scales.
However, scales such as the national early warning scale (NEWS 2) are an option for health
personnel, NEWS 2 determines the degree of illness of a patient and promotes intensive care
intervention. It includes assessing oxygen saturation, hypercapnic respiratory failure
(usually chronic obstructive pulmonary disease), confusion, disorientation, delirium, or any
reduction in the Glasgow coma scale as potential findings of clinical deterioration. With a
score of 0-4, it grants a low risk. It recommends the evaluation carried out by a competent
registered nurse or equivalent to decide the change in the frequency of clinical follow-up or
the intensification of care, on the contrary with a score of more than 7, grants high risk
and recommends Emergency Assessment by a clinical or intensive care team and is usually
transferred to a higher level of care.
Predicting the development of severe pneumonia and the need for ventilatory support is vital
for the clinician, as is the scale of COVID-GRAM; which assesses abnormalities in
radiography, age of the patient, hemoptysis, dyspnea, state of consciousness, number of
comorbidities, neutrophil/lymphocyte index, lactic dehydrogenase and direct bilirubin. It
establishes three risk groups: the mild one with a risk of critical illness of less than 1.7%
and the high risk of more than 40.4%.
The even more simplified rapid severity index for COVID-19 (qCSI) predicts the risk of acute
respiratory disease in 24 hours in patients admitted from the emergency department. Only the
heart rate, oxygen saturation, and oxygen flow to the patient are quantified. A score less
than or equal to 3 gives a low risk with a critical illness risk of 4%, while a score of
10-12 gives a high risk and a critical illness probability of 57%.
Regarding sepsis evaluation, the mSOFA scale implemented in 2010 and validated in 2019 can
predict in-hospital mortality and 30 days, with a minimum score of 0-7 that translates
mortality of 0% and a score greater than 11 translates mortality of 58%. The risk of
coagulopathy induced by sepsis secondary to COVID-19 will be present, and the sepsis-induced
coagulopathy score scale (SIC) refers to the diagnosis of coagulopathy when the score is more
significant than four, or the INR is greater than or equal to 3.
On the other hand, oxygen therapy is a cornerstone in the treatment of respiratory distress
secondary to SARS-COV2 pneumonia; therapy with high flow nasal cannula (CNAF) in the
treatment of acute respiratory failure (ARF), the ROX index (IROX) has been proposed as a
predictor of the success of CNAF at 2, 6 and 12 h of a treatment since it is essential to
have tools that allow us to detect failure early of the technique since a delay in intubation
can lead to increased mortality. A ROX index less than 3.85 predicts a high risk of the need
for intubation, and a value of 4.88 predicts a low risk of intubation.
In the present pandemic, numerous reports of the coexistence of a hyper coagulant state
secondary to COVID-19 infection have become evident, so evaluating the thrombotic risk and
initiation of anticoagulation is essential and accepted in the standard treatment in patients
with SARS infection -COV2. The Padua Risk is used; it is a simple risk assessment (MSER) that
can help clinicians discriminate between the high and low risk of venous thrombus embolism
(VTE). A score greater than or equal to four was not associated with VTE during or after
hospitalization; however, a Padua score of ≥4 was associated with higher mortality.
Regarding the therapeutics to be used, all drugs' adverse effect is known, which is why it is
necessary to scrutinize some used in SARS-CoV2 infection, such as the use of certain
antimalarials, antibiotics, and antivirals-leading to alterations in heart rhythm, the
Tisdale risk score for the risk of QT segment prolongation more significant than 500 ms
during hospitalization. A Tisdale score less than 6 translates to a low risk of QT
prolongation, while a score of more than 11 translates to high risk, and it is recommended to
consult with the pharmacist, adjust the risk factors as much as possible and use alternative
medications if possible.
Risk stratification is essential in the current COVID-19 pandemic situation; upon admission,
the clinician will discern if the patient requires in-hospital medical treatment, the risk of
severe disease, and progression to assisted mechanical ventilation. This work aims to
establish whether the severity of the findings identified by cardiac tomography upon
admission and the risk established by the different established prognostic indices.
Problem Statement
The severity of the disease is influenced by comorbidities resulting from complications or
death in any disease. In SARS-CoV2, it is known that conditions such as diabetes mellitus,
obesity, systemic arterial hypertension, neoplastic or autoimmune disease can increase the
risks of fatal outcomes. However, timely decisions to offer optimal therapy are a priority in
the present global health situation.
In this COVID-19 pandemic, the risk indices and scales are of vital importance in the correct
risk stratification of the patient with SARS-CoV2 infection, which leads to a better medical
approach decision, which therefore leads to better outcomes.
Research Question
Will the prognostic indices and the specific staging allow us to identify with greater
certainty a clinical state of severity in patients infected with SARS-CoV2?
Justification
Despite the significant advances in basic and clinical research during this year, severe
SARS-CoV2 pneumonia and sepsis with multiple organ failure have been the leading cause of
morbidity and mortality in intensive care units worldwide. The analysis of the
pathophysiological mechanisms responsible for this pandemic has allowed us to recognize some
critical points for its control and therapeutic management; however, it is necessary to
search for new, mainly preventive treatments where the critical measures of timely
recognition of patients who can evolve to a deleterious condition.
The management and therapeutic decision granted to patients admitted for COVID-19 infection
in a hospital should be uniformly known by the health personnel who treat them. However, for
those specific points are required, easy to obtain at any healthcare center's disposition.
Although many indices allow follow-up to regulate medical behavior, many fatal outcomes were
related to the non-standardization and interpretation of the clinical data that the patient
had at the time of requesting medical attention. The use of imaging studies when suspected of
COVID-19 was a universal decision that allowed to regulate therapeutic decisions and
hospitalization of the patient. The ambiguity and variability of the clinical expression that
patients infected with SARS-CoV2 presented at the time of the first evaluation in the
emergency department are known.
It is necessary to analyze the performance of the various indices and the data provided by
tomography to determine if there are relevant parameters from the beginning that subsequently
led them to be critically ill.
This study intends to evaluate the correlation of the severity indices by computed tomography
and the clinical risk indices. These clinical and laboratory variables are evaluated in the
patient's first contact concerning their health status and clinical outcome.
Goals
Overall objective:
• Determine the severity and prognosis of COVID-19 through computed tomography evaluation and
the patient's various risk indices in their initial medical evaluation.
Particular objectives:
- Describe the findings in lung computed tomography in COVID-19 (ground glass, pleural
effusion, pneumothorax, areas of condensation, etc.).
- Calculate CO-RADS
- Calculate the score for pneumonia severity (CURB-65).
- Calculate the COVID-GRAM score.
- Calculate the neutrophil/lymphocyte ratio.
- Calculate the modified sequential organ failure assessment (mSOFA) score.
- Calculate the sepsis-induced coagulopathy (SIC) score
- Calculate the ROX ratio
- Calculate the rapid COVID-19 severity index (qCSI)
- Calculate the arterial alveolus gradient score.
- Calculate Tisdale score for risk of QT prolongation.
- Calculate the Berlin score for ARDS.
Hypothesis
Alternative hypothesis:
The CO-RADS by computed tomography and the combined initial risk stratification indices
establish severity and prognosis in patients with COVID-19 infection.
Materials and methods
Study design.
It is a retrospective, observational, comparative, and cross-sectional study at the Ignacio
Chávez National Institute of Cardiology. Patients will be evaluated in whom, through the
initial triage, a computed tomography (CT) scan was requested due to suspected pneumonia due
to COVID-19, between April 1 and August 28, 2020.
Sample size calculation
This is a study calculated to determine the severity using computed tomography and its
correlation with the indices, with which 236 subjects have been calculated in the recruitment
of patients with an objective sample. This method approaches the calculation of the different
forecasts determined by correlation.
Origin of the subjects.
Patients admitted to the emergency department, coronary unit, or post-surgical therapy unit
of the National Institute of Cardiology Ignacio Chávez.
Analysis strategy
Continuous variables will be expressed as mean with standard deviation; categorical variables
are expressed as frequencies and percentages. The normality of the variables will be
evaluated using the Shapiro-Wilk test. Those variables with normal distribution will be
analyzed with parametric tests (Student's t-test). Various non-parametric tests
(Mann-Whitney, Kruskal-Wallis test, or Wilcoxon signed-rank test depending on the particular
case) will be used to contrast variables without Gaussian distribution. For the multivariate
analysis, binary logistic regression analysis or a multivariate regression escalation will be
performed depending on the findings.
Ethical considerations
This protocol will be sent for review by the Ethics and Research Committees of the Ignacio
Chávez National Institute of Cardiology and will be based on the Declaration of Helsinki's
recommendations. The anonymity of all patients will be preserved. It is an observational
study without intervention, so that it will be initiated through the authorization of the
Research Committee's decision.
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