Author: Oshay, Rachel R.; Chen, Michael Y.C.; Fields, Brandon K.K.; Demirjian, Natalie L.; Lee, Ryan S.; Mosallaei, Daniel; Gholamrezanezhad, Ali
Title: COVID-19 in pregnancy: a systematic review of chest CT findings and associated clinical features in 427 patients Cord-id: fuxpyk4y Document date: 2021_1_13
ID: fuxpyk4y
Snippet: PURPOSE: Our purpose was to conduct a comprehensive systematic review of all existing literature regarding imaging findings on chest CT as well as associated clinical features in pregnant patients diagnosed with COVID-19. MATERIALS & METHODS: A literature search was conducted on April 21, 2020 and updated on July 24, 2020 using PubMed, Embase, World Health Organization, and Google Scholar. Only studies which described chest CT findings of COVID-19 in pregnant patients were included for analysis.
Document: PURPOSE: Our purpose was to conduct a comprehensive systematic review of all existing literature regarding imaging findings on chest CT as well as associated clinical features in pregnant patients diagnosed with COVID-19. MATERIALS & METHODS: A literature search was conducted on April 21, 2020 and updated on July 24, 2020 using PubMed, Embase, World Health Organization, and Google Scholar. Only studies which described chest CT findings of COVID-19 in pregnant patients were included for analysis. RESULTS: A total of 67 articles and 427 pregnant patients were analyzed. The most frequently encountered pulmonary findings on chest CT of pregnant patients diagnosed with COVID-19 were ground-glass opacities (77.2%, 250/324), posterior involvement (72.5%, 50/69), multilobar involvement (71.8%, 239/333), bilateral lung involvement (69.4%, 231/333), peripheral distribution (68.1%, 98/144), and consolidation (40.9%, 94/230). Pregnant patients were also found to present more frequently with consolidation (40.9% vs. 21.0–31.8%) and pleural effusion (30.0% vs. 5.0%). Clinical findings included antepartum fever (198 cases), lymphopenia (128 cases), and neutrophilia (97 cases). Of the 251 neonates delivered to mothers with COVID-19, 96.8% of the neonates had negative RT-PCR and/or IgG antibody testing. In the eight cases (3.2%) of reported neonatal infection, tests were either conducted up to 72 h after birth or were found negative on all subsequent RT-PCR tests. CONCLUSION: Pregnant patients appear to present with more advanced COVID-19 CT findings than those of the general adult population. The changes in laboratory values found in pregnant patients also mirror those found in the general patient population. Lastly, results from neonatal testing suggest low risk of vertical transmission. SUMMARY STATEMENT: The initial chest CT scans of 427 pregnant patients with COVID-19 showed higher rates of consolidation and pleural effusion in comparison to the general population.
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