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Justification of radiological procedures in COVID-19 pandemic based on radiation risk only

Publication ,  Conference
Ria, F; Fu, W; Chalian, H; Segars, W; Fricks, R; Khoshpouri, P; Samei, E
December 2, 2020

Purpose. Radiologic procedures are recommended based on benefit-to-risk justification. In X-ray imaging, while the benefit is often immediate for the patient, the associated radiation burden risk is a longer-term effect. Such a temporal gap can bias the justification process in imaging utilization, particularly during a spreading pandemic like COVID-19 in which fast and accurate diagnostic tools are highly needed. Chest CT and chest radiography (CXR) have shown promising results in the diagnosis and management of COVID-19, providing support to the standard RT-PCR test. However, several institutions are discouraging the use of imaging for this purpose, partly due to radiation risk. This study aims to provide quantitative data towards an effective risk-to benefit analysis for the justification of radiological studies in the diagnosis and management of COVID-19 to guide clinicians and decision making. Materials and Methods. The analysis was performed in terms of mortality rate per age group. COVID-19 mortality was extracted from epidemiological data across 159,107 patients in Italy. For radiological risk, the study considered 659 Chest CT scans performed in adult patients. Organ doses were estimated using a Monte Carlo based method and then used to calculate a risk index that was converted into a related 5-year mortality rate (SEER, NCI). Results. COVID-19 mortality showed a rapid rise for ages >30 years old (min: 0.30%; max: 30.20%). Only 1 death was reported in the analyzed patient cohort for ages <20 years old. The mortality rates based on radiation exposure decreased across age groups. The median mortality rate across all ages for Chest CT and CXR were 0.72% (min: 0.46%; max: 1.10%) and 0.03% (min: 0.02%; max: 0.04%), respectively. Conclusions. Radiation risk is not the only factor that should be taken into account for justifying the use of imaging in COVID care; nonetheless, it is an essential factor of consideration. The risk associated with COVID-19, CT, and CXR exhibited different magnitudes and trends across age groups. In higher ages, the risk of COVID-19 far outweighed that of radiological exams. Based on risk comparison alone, CXR and Chest CT are justified for COVID-19 care of patients older than 30 and 50 years old, respectively. Clinical Relevance statement (max 200 characters, with spaces) Towards a comprehensive radiological procedures risk-to-benefit assessment, CT and CXR should not be a priori excluded in the diagnosis and management of the COVID-19.

Duke Scholars

Publication Date

December 2, 2020

Location

virtual

Conference Name

Radiological Society of North America 106th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting
 

Citation

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Ria, F., Fu, W., Chalian, H., Segars, W., Fricks, R., Khoshpouri, P., & Samei, E. (2020). Justification of radiological procedures in COVID-19 pandemic based on radiation risk only. Presented at the Radiological Society of North America 106th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting, virtual.
Ria, Francesco, wanyi Fu, Hamid Chalian, W. Segars, Rafael Fricks, Pegah Khoshpouri, and Ehsan Samei. “Justification of radiological procedures in COVID-19 pandemic based on radiation risk only,” 2020.
Ria F, Fu W, Chalian H, Segars W, Fricks R, Khoshpouri P, et al. Justification of radiological procedures in COVID-19 pandemic based on radiation risk only. In 2020.
Ria F, Fu W, Chalian H, Segars W, Fricks R, Khoshpouri P, Samei E. Justification of radiological procedures in COVID-19 pandemic based on radiation risk only. 2020.

Publication Date

December 2, 2020

Location

virtual

Conference Name

Radiological Society of North America 106th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting