In a study covering more than 1,000 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19), chest CT proved to be more accurate than the standard method of DNA testing for early diagnosis of the disease in high-risk individuals. The findings were published online February 26 in Radiology.
Nucleic acid testing with reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) is considered the standard technique for diagnosing COVID-19. However, the long processing time and shaky outcomes of initial RT-PCR tests have made evident the need for a more efficient alternative for early diagnosis of the disease.
A recent examination of 51 cases demonstrated that CT had better sensitivity at detecting COVID-19 than RT-PCR testing among high-risk individuals upon initial presentation of symptoms, highlighting CT's utility in early diagnosis. The Chinese National Health Commission also sanctioned diagnosis through clinical symptoms and chest CT as an official method to confirm COVID-19 in the highly affected province of Hubei.
Expanding upon this prior work, researchers from China and the Netherlands examined data from 1,014 patients in Wuhan city, the presumed source of the outbreak, who were suspected of having COVID-19 and underwent a chest CT exam and had RT-PCR testing of throat swab samples between January 6 and February 6.
Two radiologists with access to the patients' epidemiological history and clinical symptoms but blinded to the RT-PCR results classified the chest CT scans as positive or negative for COVID-19 based on the presence of key abnormal CT features. All of the patients were eventually confirmed to have COVID-19 with RT-PCR testing. The average age of the cohort was 51 years, and 56% were female.
Overall, the researchers found that chest CT was better at diagnosing COVID-19 than RT-PCR testing upon initial examination of high-risk individuals. The initial RT-PCR testing period included multiple repeat tests up to three days after presentation.
Initial RT-PCR testing detected COVID-19 in only 59% of the cases. In comparison, 88% of the patients showed chest CT findings indicative of COVID-19. Among those with negative initial RT-PCR results, 93% showed CT features consistent with COVID-19 diagnosis prior to eventual confirmation on RT-PCR four or more days after the initial test.
Chest CT achieved a sensitivity of 97%, a specificity of 25%, and an accuracy of 68% for diagnosis of COVID-19 upon initial presentation of high-risk individuals, where eventual confirmation on RT-PCR served as the reference standard. The positive predictive value for chest CT was 65% and the negative predictive value was 83%.
"Our data and analysis suggest that chest CT should be considered for COVID-19 screening, comprehensive evaluation, and follow-up, especially in epidemic areas with high pretest probability for disease," wrote the authors, led by Dr. Tao Ai, PhD, and Dr. Zhenlu Yang, PhD, from Huazhong University of Science and Technology.
Relying on a combination of exposure history, clinical symptoms, and CT features rather than RT-PCR tests alone would aid in more rapid detection of the disease and may allow for better control of viral spread, they concluded.