Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Radiology . Impact of Vaccination and the Omicron Variant on COVID-19-related Chest CT Findings: A Multicenter Study

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Radiology . Impact of Vaccination and the Omicron Variant on COVID-19-related Chest CT Findings: A Multicenter Study


    Radiology


    . 2023 Mar 7;222730.
    doi: 10.1148/radiol.222730. Online ahead of print.
    Impact of Vaccination and the Omicron Variant on COVID-19-related Chest CT Findings: A Multicenter Study


    Amandine Crombé # 1 2 , Lounès Bensid # 1 , Mylène Seux 2 , David Fadli 2 3 , François Arnaud 2 4 , Axel Benhamed 5 , Nathan Banaste 1 5 , Guillaume Gorincour 1 6



    Affiliations

    Abstract

    Background Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) omicron variant has a higher infection rate than previous variants but results in less severe disease. However, the impacts of omicron and vaccination on chest CT findings are difficult to evaluate. Purpose To investigate the impact of vaccination status and predominant variant on chest CT findings, diagnostic and severity scores in multicenter sample of consecutive patients referred to emergency departments for proven COVID-19. Materials and Methods This retrospective, multicenter study included adults referred to 93 emergency departments with SARS-CoV-2 infection according to RT-PCR and known vaccination status between July 2021 and March 2022. Clinical data and structured chest CT reports including semiquantitative diagnostic and severity scores following the French Society of Radiology-Thoracic Imaging Society guidelines were extracted from a teleradiology database. Observations were divided into 'delta-predominant', 'transition', and 'omicron-predominant' periods. Associations between scores and variant and vaccination status were investigated with Chi-square tests and ordinal regressions. Multivariable analyses evaluated the influence of omicron variant and vaccination status on the diagnostic and severity scores. Results Overall, 3876 patients were included (median age: 68 years [Q1-Q3: 54-80], 1695 females). Diagnostic and severity scores were associated with the predominant variant (delta- versus omicron-predominant, Chi-square=112.4 and 33.7, both P<.001) and vaccination (Chi-square=243.6 and 210, both P<.001) and their interaction (Chi-square=4.3, P=.04 and Chi-square=28.7, P<.001, respectively). In multivariable analyses, omicron variant was associated with lower odds of typical CT findings than delta variant (OR=0.46, P<.001). Two and three vaccine doses were associated with lower odds of demonstrating typical CT findings (OR=0.32 and OR=0.20, both P<.001), and of having high severity score (OR=0.47 and OR=0.33, both P<.001), compared with unvaccinated patients. Conclusion Both the omicron variant and vaccination were associated with less typical chest CT manifestations for COVID-19 and lesser extent of disease. See also the editorial by Yoon and Goo in this issue.


Working...
X