Editor:
It was my pleasure to read the recently published article “Efficacy of Chest CT for COVID-19 Pneumonia in France” by Herpe and colleagues (1). The authors found no significant difference for sensitivity of chest CT among regions with varying disease prevalence and concluded that chest CT was used successfully in suspicious patients for COVID-19 pneumonia as an initial diagnostic tool. These findings allow us to understand various aspects of the pandemic and will be very useful for regions where testing kits are scarce or test results have been delayed.
Although the article provides valuable information I want to draw attention to potential side affects of CT usage for the diagnosis of COVID-19. After the COVID-19 outbreak was characterized as pandemic by World Health Organization, American College of Radiology published a statement against the use of chest CT as a screening or first-line diagnostic tool for suspected COVID-19 patients (2). This statement was generated based on concerns such as the risks of patients’ exposure to radiation, minimizing the likelihood of disease transmission and decreasing the burden of the imaging facilities due to potential patient surge.
The authors reported that CT usage for all suspected patients ultimately yielded only 93 additional patients for the diagnosis of COVID-19 among CT positive and initial PCR test negative patients. When considering the large number of scanned patients (7443) in this study, the utility of chest CT as a first-line imaging tool may be questionable. Furthermore, the authors reported that the accuracy of first chest CT (90%) is lower than the first PCR (97%). These findings suggest that routine screening of COVID-19 patients with chest CT may not be beneficial at patient level.
The COVID-19 pandemic is still continuing to evolve and affects many people almost in all countries/territories around the world. If all suspected patients undergo CT scans, it may bring devastating consequences on healthcare systems. Therefore, the debate for the diagnosis of COVID-19 remains unsolved, and rather than use of chest CT as fist-line diagnostic tool for COVID-19, improvements in availability, sensitivity and turnaround times of RT-PCR tests can be a better solution.
References
- 1. Herpe G, Mathieu L, Mathieu N, et al. Efficacy of Chest CT for COVID-19 Pneumonia in France . Radiology . 2020 Sep 1. . doi: 10.1148/radiol.2020202568 [Google Scholar]
- 2. American College of Radiology . https://www.acr.org/Advocacy-and-Economics/ACR-Position-Statements/Recommendations-for-Chest-Radiography-and-CT-for-Suspected-COVID19-Infection. Accessed on 2020 September 2 .