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Cumulative Radiation Exposure in Covid-19 Patients Admitted to the Intensive Care Unit

Authors :
Lama, Hadid-Beurrier
Axel, Cohen
Bouchra, Habib-Geryes
Sébastian, Voicu
Isabelle, Malissin
Nicolas, Deye
Bruno, Mégarbane
Valérie, Bousson
Source :
Radiation Research. 197
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Radiation Research Society, 2022.

Abstract

Medical imaging plays a major role in coronavirus disease-2019 (COVID-19) patient diagnosis and management. However, the radiation dose received from medical procedures by these patients has been poorly investigated. We aimed to estimate the cumulative effective dose (CED) related to medical exposure in COVID-19 patients admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU) in comparison to the usual critically ill patients. We designed a descriptive cohort study including 90 successive ICU COVID-19 patients admitted between March and May 2020 and 90 successive non-COVID-19 patients admitted between March and May 2019. In this study, the CED resulting from all radiological examinations was calculated and clinical characteristics predictive of higher exposure risk identified. The number of radiological examinations was 12.0 (5.0-26.0) [median (interquartile range) in COVID-19 vs. 4.0 (2.0-8.0) in non-COVID-19 patient (P0.001)]. The CED during a four-month period was 4.2 mSv (1.9-11.2) in the COVID-19 vs. 1.2 mSv (0.13-6.19) in the non-COVID-19 patients (P0.001). In the survivors, the CED in COVID-19 vs. non-COVID-19 patients was ≥100 mSv in 3% vs. 0%, 10-100 mSv in 23% vs. 15%, 1-10 mSv in 56% vs. 30% and1 mSv in 18% vs. 55%. The CED (P0.001) and CED per ICU hospitalization day (P = 0.004) were significantly higher in COVID-19 than non-COVID-19 patients. The CED correlated significantly with the hospitalization duration (r = 0.45, P0.001) and the number of conventional radiological examinations (r = 0.8, P0.001). To conclude, more radiological examinations were performed in critically ill COVID-19 patients than non-COVID-19 patients resulting in higher CED. In COVID-19 patients, contribution of strategies to limit CED should be investigated in the future.

Details

ISSN :
00337587
Volume :
197
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Radiation Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9dc43c87da718cef26f244e8b8c74990