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The clinical value of minimal invasive autopsy in COVID-19 patients

Authors :
D'ONOFRIO, Valentino
Donders, Elena
Vanden Abeele, Marie-Elena
Dubois, Jasperina
Cartuyvels, Reinoud
ACHTEN, Ruth
Lammens, Martin
Dendooven, Amelie
DRIESSEN, Ann
Augsburg, Lukasz
Vanrusselt, Jan
COX, Janneke
Pasin, Laura
Source :
PLOS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 11, p e0242300 (2020), PLoS ONE
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background Minimally invasive autopsy (MIA) is a validated and safe method to establish the cause of death (COD), mainly in low-resource settings. However, the additional clinical value of MIA in Coronavirus disease (COVID-19) patients in a high-resource setting is unknown. The objective was to assess if and how MIA changed clinical COD and contributing diagnoses in deceased COVID-19 patients. Methods and findings A prospective observational cohort from April to May 2020 in a 981-bed teaching hospital in the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in Belgium was established. Patients who died with either PCR-confirmed or radiologically confirmed COVID-19 infection were consecutively included. MIA consisted of whole-body CT and CT-guided Tru-Cut (R) biopsies. Diagnostic modalities were clinical chart review, radiology, microbiology, and histopathology which were assessed by two independent experts per modality. MIA COD and contributing diagnoses were established during a multi-disciplinary meeting. Clinical COD (CCOD) and contributing diagnosis were abstracted from the discharge letter. The main outcomes were alterations in CCOD and contributing diagnoses after MIA, and the contribution of each diagnostic modality. We included 18 patients, of which 7 after intensive care unit hospitalization. MIA led to an alteration in 15/18 (83%) patients. The CCOD was altered in 5/18 (28%) patients. MIA found a new COD (1/5), a more specific COD (1/5), a less certain COD (1/5), or a contributing diagnosis to be the COD (2/5). Contributing diagnoses were altered in 14/18 (78%) patients: 9 new diagnoses, 5 diagnoses dismissed, 3 made more specific, and 2 made less certain. Overall, histopathology contributed in 14/15 (93%) patients with alterations, radiology and microbiology each in 6/15 (40%), and clinical review in 3/15 (20%). Histopathology was deemed the most important modality in 10 patients, radiology in two patients, and microbiology in one patient. Conclusion MIA, especially histological examination, can add valuable new clinical information regarding the cause of death in COVID-19 patients, even in a high-resource setting with wide access to premortem diagnostic modalities. MIA may provide important clinical insights and should be applied in the current ongoing pandemic. This study/Janneke Cox has received funding from the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO) (G0G2620N). FWO.be. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. This study is part of the Limburg Clinical Research Center (LCRC) UHasselt-ZOL-Jessa, supported by the foundation Limburg Sterk Merk (LSM), Hasselt University, Ziekenhuis Oost-Limburg and Jessa Hospital. Cox, J (corresponding author), Hasselt Univ, Fac Med & Life Sci, Hasselt, Belgium ; Jessa Hosp, Dept Infect Dis & Immun, Hasselt, Belgium janneke.cox@jessazh.be

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19326203
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLOS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 15, Iss 11, p e0242300 (2020), PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0edcc5e3a45c85d11e2760e0711e3db8