key: cord-0910585-006w4idg authors: Tofighi, Salar; Najafi, Saeideh; Johnston, Sean K.; Gholamrezanezhad, Ali title: Low-dose CT in COVID-19 outbreak: radiation safety, image wisely, and image gently pledge date: 2020-05-10 journal: Emerg Radiol DOI: 10.1007/s10140-020-01784-3 sha: 2c232fbd4bffff04b752d050ec1e48664f842f12 doc_id: 910585 cord_uid: 006w4idg nan both young and elderly [12] . Since there is currently no vaccine for COVID-19, successful disease containment is contingent upon rapid identification of infected individuals to isolate them and their close contacts [9, 13] . The urgent need for an alternative diagnostic than RT-PCR kits has given rise to the possibility of utilization of chest CT findings as a diagnostic aid and a screening tool in suspected patients [13] . In a review of the worldwide approach to the management of COVID-19 outbreak, authors reported that many countries are currently using CT scan as a screening tool for suspected patients due to the lack of resources (under review). Recently, a large study from Wuhan has suggested application of CT scan as an alternative diagnostic method which as of today demonstrated higher sensitivity than existing RT-PCR kits [9] despite that it has not yet been approved by major radiology associations. CT scan is a widely available modality and can readily be performed. In this study, it was reported that 88% of suspected patients had findings suggestive of COVID-19 in chest CT while the positive rate of RT-PCR kits was only 59% [9] . Of those with negative RT-PCR, CT findings were suggestive of highly likely disease and probable disease 48% and 33% respectively [9] . It was also shown that CT findings were detected in infected individuals before the RT-PCR kits did in symptomatic individuals. In patients whose initial serologic result was negative and subsequently were found to be positive on repeat testing, the second positive test results took an average of 5.1 days. Ninety-seven percent of those cases already had positive imaging findings, which were present with a mean of 8 days before the second positive serologic test results were available [9] . Bilateral ground-glass opacities (GGO) and/or consolidation have been suggested as the hallmark of COVID-19 infection on chest CT images [7, 9, [13] [14] [15] . While they may be nonspecific, these findings are easily identifiable on CT and should in the proper clinical setting aid diagnosis. GGO is an increased attenuation with preserved vascular and airway markings. With consolidation, these markings are obscured by the infiltration's effect on images. In a recent study, 78% of symptomatic patients had these findings on CT; of those, 60% demonstrated bilateral lung involvement. Imaging findings were detected in 91% of cases within 3-5 days after symptom onset. Interestingly, the serologic tests result became available at almost the same time in this study (4.5 days) [14] . In emergent situations such as COVID-19 pandemic, the demand for performing CT scans may significantly increase due to the high rate of infected individuals. Myers et al. have recently suggested that radiology departments should prepare for the flood of COVID-19 patients during the outbreak and therefore should be engaged in creating the hospital's mass casualty incident plan [16] . Furthermore, severely symptomatic patients will often undergo multiple imaging studies during the course of their illness. The cumulative effect of these multiple exams can significantly increase the cumulative radiation dose these patients may receive during their hospitalization and recovery. The as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) principle states that whenever radiation is expected, the exposure should be as low as reasonably achievable [17] . Keeping this important principle in mind, it is critical that we remember that any CT scan we perform should be accompanied by the justification of examination and optimization of radiation dose [18] . This is of particular importance when evaluating more radiation-sensitive patient populations such as pregnant patients and children. While CT imaging has been shown to be a great help in establishing the diagnosis of COVID-19, the potential for increased radiation exposure to a large number of patients across the country cannot be ignored. Balancing the need for effective imaging to aid rapid diagnosis while also trying to minimize radiation exposure will be important for radiologists and clinicians alike as we work together to manage to COVID-19 outbreak. Replacing conventional CT (CCT) with low-dose CT (LDCT) and ultra-low-dose CT (ULDCT) has been proposed as a method to decrease radiation exposure in these patients (Figs. 1 and 2). In a retrospective study [13] , LDCT with iterative reconstruction (IR) demonstrated sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of about 90% in the diagnosis of COVID-19. These parameters further increased to up to 96% when patients were symptomatic for more than 48 h. The likelihood of COVID-19 diagnosis increased to 91% from pre-LDCT value of 43% in patients with suggestive imaging findings whereas it was decreased to 9% in those with normal or atypical imaging findings. The respective post-LDCT values in patients with > 48 h of symptoms were 91% and 3%. Furthermore, LDCT demonstrated an additive diagnostic benefit in patients with concomitant bacterial pneumonia or an alternative diagnosis other than COVID-19. Since GGO and consolidation are the primary CT presentations of COVID-19 that have been shown to be effectively detected in LDCT or ULDCT, these low-dose image acquisition methods can be utilized for the evaluation of more radiation-sensitive individuals such as pregnant patients. The radiation dose with chest CCT is estimated at 7 mSv, which is reduced to 1-1.5 mSv with the new LDCT methods and as low as 0.3 mSv with ULDCT ones [18] . LDCT and ULDCT have shown efficacy to detect lung abnormalities (Table 1) . Park et al. suggested that utilization of LDCT in the evaluation of patients suspected to have lower respiratory infections had successfully detected GGO and small consolidation when these pathologic findings were not detectable in the radiographic images [22] . Kubo et al. compared the detection of GGO and reticular opacities of LDCT with a previous CCT and reported an agreement rate of 83% between them [25] . In contrast, Christe et al. showed that sensitivity of LDCT (77%) is less than CCT (89%) in the detection of GGO particularly for patchy lesions but no significant difference was observed in the detection of consolidation between these scans. In fact, of the missed GGO lesion, half were detected as a nodule [26] . Kim Y. et al. observed no significant differences between LDCT and ULDCT in the detection of GGO and consolidation [19] . Likewise, pediatric patients benefit from dose reduction as they are at increased risk of malignancy following radiation due to their longer life expectancy and higher cell proliferation. A 1-year-old child is 10 times more susceptible to the adverse effects of ionizing radiation than an adult [28] . In a study published in JAMA, the routine effective dose delivered to pediatric patients during chest CT was calculated between 5 and 8 mAs. The lifetime attributable risk of solid organ malignancies per 10,000 CT scans was measured as high as 30 and 9 for girls and boys respectively. As it is expected, the projected radiation dose to body organs is higher in thyroid, lung, breast, and esophagus during a chest CT acquisition. It was reported that as low as 350 CT scans are needed to be performed to observe 1 cancer in girls [29] . LDCT scan has been also suggested in the evaluation of lung abnormalities in pediatrics and successfully detected GGOs and consolidations. Sun et al. measured an overall radiation dose of 0.59 mSv for evaluation of necrotizing pneumonia in different methods of irritative reconstruction which was significantly lower than CCT. They also demonstrated better detection and lower noise for lung lesions using LDCT performed with iterative reconstruction [21] . Therefore, low-dose CT image acquisition methods are of value in the evaluation of pediatric patients. IR methods have been used to improve image quality in low-dose image acquisition and decrease noise while reducing radiation dose. Sakai et al. used simulated GGO and reticular Fig. 1 A 57- year-old male presented with fever and shortness of breath in an epidemic area of COVID-19 (Iran) for diagnostic work-up. Low-dose CT demonstrates multifocal basilar predominant peripheral ground-glass opacities, characteristic of SARS- CoV-2 pneumonia (a, b) . The low-dose CT chest radiation dosimetry of the patient was DLP of 78.34 mGy × cm and CTDIvol of 2.03 mGy. Conventional CT chest protocol in the same patient would result in DLP of 301.14 mGy × cm and CTDIvol of 7.87 mGy, which means that low-dose protocol decreased the radiation dose to less than 50% without a significant impact on the diagnostic value. (CT protocol: 100 kVp, 40 mAs, 0.5 s without iterative reconstruction) Fig. 2 Low-dose chest CT in a 77-year-old male with high-grade fever, shortness of breath, malaise, and cough in an epidemic area of COVID-19 (Iran) demonstrate left upper lobe ground-glass opacity (a). The patient had areas of consolidation superimposed on ground-glass opacity in bilateral lung bases (b). The constellation of findings is in keeping with SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. The low-dose CT chest radiation dosimetry of the patient was DLP of 68.21 mGy × cm and CTDIvol of 2.10 mGy. Conventional CT chest protocol in the same patient would result in DLP of 264.55 mGy × cm and CTDIvol of 5.92 mGy, which means that low-dose protocol decreased the radiation dose to about 50% without a significant impact on the diagnostic value. (CT protocol: 100 kVp, 50 mAs, 0.5 s without iterative reconstruction) opacity lesions and implemented them inside the apex and lower lobe of the lung [30] . They obtained LDCT images using the IR method in various levels of radiation dose and compared it with filtered back projection (FBP) method which is widely used in scanners. They observed that although there was no significant difference in visual detection of reticular opacity between these two modalities, IR dramatically improved GGO visualization at low radiation doses. In a clinical study, IR demonstrated better detection of necrotizing lesions in children evaluated for necrotizing pneumonia [21] . Ohno et al. showed that without the implementation of IR, the image quality of LDCT was significantly lower than CCT. Following the addition of IR, no significant difference was noted [27] . Since CT scan is capable to aid the diagnosis of COVID-19 in conjunction with other clinical findings, the utilization of LDCT and ULDCT with iterative reconstruction can be potentially recommended for the evaluation of these patients particularly in pregnant and pediatric populations to reduce radiation exposure. Although LDCT and ULDCT have demonstrated comparable efficacy in the detection of GGO and consolidation in patients with pneumonia, no studies have evaluated the efficacy of LDCT and ULDCT in the detection of pulmonary findings in the setting of COVID-19. A head to head comparison of low-dose and conventional protocol in very early stages of the disease is needed, while in intermediate and advanced stages, probably the low-dose CT protocol will provide adequate image quality and diagnostic accuracy. Author contribution Authors contributed equally in all aspects of study. Data availability The authors declare that they had full access to all of the data in this study and the authors take complete responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis. Conflict of interest The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. COVID-2019) situation reports: World Health Organization (WHO) A pneumonia outbreak associated with a new coronavirus of probable bat origin COVID-19): World Health Organization (WHO) First case of 2019 novel coronavirus in the United States Radiology perspective of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): lessons from severe acute respiratory syndrome and Middle East respiratory syndrome Coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak: what the Department of Radiology should know Correlation of chest CT and RT-PCR testing in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) in China: a report of 1014 cases Willman D Contamination at CDC lab delayed rollout of coronavirus tests -The Washington Post Restuccia A Manufacturing defect in some early CDC test kits being probed Responding to Covid-19 -a once-in-a-century pandemic? Accuracy and reproducibility of low-dose submillisievert chest CT for the diagnosis of COVID-19 Chest CT findings in coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19): relationship to duration of infection Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19): a systematic review of imaging findings in 919 patients Coronavirus outbreak: is radiology ready? Mass casualty incident planning As low as reasonably achievable (ALARA): radiopaedia.org Low and ultra-low dose radiation in CT: opportunities and limitations Ultra-low-dose CT of the thorax using iterative reconstruction: evaluation of image quality and radiation dose reduction Ultralow-dose chest CT without anesthesia in the assessment of pediatric pulmonary diseases Image quality improvement using model-based iterative reconstruction in low dose chest CT for children with necrotizing pneumonia The usefulness of low-dose CT scan in elderly patients with suspected acute lower respiratory infection in the emergency room Low-dose computed tomography in assessment of pulmonary abnormalities in children with febrile neutropenia suffering from malignant diseases Clinical value of low dose CT-scan in pediatric chest diseases: adequacy assessment Low dose chest CT protocol (50mAs) as a routine protocol for comprehensive assessment of intrathoracic abnormality Accuracy of low-dose computed tomography (CT) for detecting and characterizing the most common CT-patterns of pulmonary disease Adaptive iterative dose reduction using 3D processing for reduced-and low-dose pulmonary CT: comparison with standard-dose CT for image noise reduction and radiological findings Radiation exposure from CT scans in childhood and subsequent risk of leukaemia and brain tumours: a retrospective cohort study The use of computed tomography in pediatrics and the associated radiation exposure and estimated cancer risk Low-dose CT screening using hybrid iterative reconstruction: confidence ratings of diagnoses of simulated lesions other than lung cancer Publisher's note Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations