key: cord-0705701-7vk6vcgk authors: Antúnez‐Montes, Omar Yassef title: Proposal to Unify the Colorimetric Triage System With the Standardized Lung Ultrasound Score for COVID‐19 date: 2020-08-27 journal: J Ultrasound Med DOI: 10.1002/jum.15446 sha: 6ddc8456d015d10943f623ea4c49999bcca405b2 doc_id: 705701 cord_uid: 7vk6vcgk nan To the Editor: I read with great interest the findings published by Soldati et al, 1 who proposed a magnificent and simple standardization of the lesions captured by pulmonary ultrasound (US) for patients with coronavirus disease 2019 . This approach opens the possibilities of treatment in out-of-hospital settings such as care by highly trained personnel who work in ground or air ambulances or remote locations and those with limited resources such as countries with emerging economies. The 3 scoring levels proposed according to the characteristics of the lung lesions are correlated with our colorimetric triage proposal and can be linked together in a joint classification system, as proposed below. We recently published a proposal for US triage 2 based on the characteristic lesion patterns caused by COVID-19 (severe respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2) that are identifiable by lung ultrasound (LUS) and the possible type of clinical presentation of a patient with or without respiratory symptoms, without the need for a confirmatory test when interviewing the patient at a geographic location with an accelerated contagion mechanism. The triage is divided into 3 colors (green, yellow, and red), making for an intuitive and rapid classification of the severity of the patients as follows: This system allows professionals to determine the severity even in the prehospital phase because of the acknowledgment of any suggestive imaging that is highly suspicious of severity. With portable or pocket devices at the patient's bedside, the exploration allows a real-time reassessment of the condition of patients in their home, the ED, the ICU, or field hospitals, reducing time, money, and the risk of nosocomial exposure to the virus, helping prevent saturation of the medical service sector, as is happening already in the rest of the world, especially in developing economies and those lacking resources. The point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) lung scan has the versatility of being reproduced as many times as necessary with immediate results, having the opportunity to change the triage color at the moment, reclassifying the severity or improvement of the disease. This POCUS lung triage can help professionals identify low-risk (green) cases at first contact, which can lead to considering them "negative by LUS" and testing them, and the patients can be put in isolation; those "suggestive or positive by LUS" (yellow and red) with abnormal patterns ought to be evaluated in the ED. We suggest that health care workers, particularly those operating in low-to middle-resource settings, unify the LUS COVID proposed score 1 with the colorimetric triage, as exemplified in Figures 1 and 2. 1. Green: Those confirmed or suspected COVID-19 cases with good clinical conditions and an LUS score of 0 in most lung areas or 1 in some areas. These patients are at low risk and can be monitored at home. 2. Yellow: Those confirmed or suspected patients with medium risk according to clinical symptoms and an LUS score of 1 in most areas (those with and irregular and indented pleural line with vertical artifacts will have a score of 1) or 2 in some areas (broken pleural line, subpleural consolidation, and patchy areas of white lung). These patients have a moderate risk and should be evaluated in the hospital, unless accurate and frequent home medical services can be guaranteed 3. Red: Those moderately to seriously ill patients evaluated by health care workers with an LUS score of 2 or 3 in most areas (mainly in the middle and basal areas of the posterior thorax). These patients are at high risk and should be quickly evaluated in the hospital and admitted. The proposed unification of the criteria maintains the simplicity of both systems and strengthens them by providing diagnostic tools and allowing classification and rapid dispatch of patients to other areas. It can provide opportunities for participation of a wide variety of professionals in the ER and ICU and allow physicians from different settings to speak the same language in observation areas, field hospitals, remote rural areas with a lack of resources, and ground and air ambulances. In summary, a green triage will indicate a patient with mild illness and a POCUS lung score of 0 in almost all areas: observe at home. A yellow triage will indicate a patient with moderate disease with a possible transition to severe disease and a POCUS lung score of 1 in most areas or 2 in some: close observation at home if it can be guaranteed; otherwise, assess in the hospital. A red triage will indicate a patient with serious or critical illness and yield a POCUS lung score of 2 or 3 in most areas: provide hospital care. The versatility of this system allows the identification of confirmed or suspected patients due to the type of lung injury captured during the lung POCUS exploration and clinically suspicious presentations at geographic locations with an accelerated contagion curve for COVID-19. Omar Yassef Antúnez-Montes, MD Proposal for international standardization of the use of lung ultrasound for patients with COVID-19: a simple, quantitative, reproducible method Routine use of point-of-care lung ultrasound during the COVID-19 pandemic