Lung histopathologic clusters in severe COVID-19: a link between
clinical picture and tissue damage
by Maddalena Alessandra Wu, Gianluca Lopez, Manuela
Nebuloni, Davide Ottolina, Jonathan Montomoli, Luca Carsana, Tommaso Fossali,
Antonio Castelli, Roberto Rech, Chiara Cogliati, Emanuele Catena and Riccardo
Colombo
Critical Care volume 25,
Article number: 423 (2021) Published: 13
December 2021
Background
Autoptic pulmonary findings have been described in severe
COVID-19 patients, but evidence regarding the correlation between clinical
picture and lung histopathologic patterns is still weak.
Methods
This was a retrospective cohort observational study conducted
at the referral center for infectious diseases in northern Italy. Full lung
autoptic findings and clinical data of patients who died from COVID-19 were
analyzed. Lung histopathologic patterns were scored according to the extent of
tissue damage. To consider coexisting histopathologic patterns, hierarchical
clustering of histopathologic findings was applied.
Results
Whole pulmonary examination was available in 75 out of 92
full autopsies. Forty-eight hospitalized patients (64%), 44 from ICU and four
from the medical ward, had complete clinical data. The histopathologic patterns
had a time-dependent distribution with considerable overlap among patterns.
Duration of positive-pressure ventilation (p < 0.0001), mean positive
end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) (p = 0.007), worst serum albumin (p = 0.017),
interleukin 6 (p = 0.047), and kidney SOFA (p = 0.001) differed among
histopathologic clusters. The amount of PEEP for long-lasting ventilatory
treatment was associated with the cluster showing the largest areas of early
and late proliferative diffuse alveolar damage. No pharmacologic interventions
or comorbidities affected the lung histopathology.
Conclusions
Our study draws a comprehensive link between the clinical
and pulmonary histopathologic findings in a large cohort of COVID-19 patients.
These results highlight that the positive end-expiratory pressures and the
duration of the ventilatory treatment correlate with lung histopathologic
patterns, providing new clues to the knowledge of the pathophysiology of severe
SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia.
No comments:
Post a Comment