Pulmonary Vascular Thrombosis in COVID-19 Pneumonia

Venous Thrombosis SARS-CoV-2 COVID-19 computed tomography Thrombosis D-dimer increase 3. Good health critical care 03 medical and health sciences Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine 0302 clinical medicine inflammation Humans Original Article Prospective Studies Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine Pulmonary Embolism thrombosis
DOI: 10.1053/j.jvca.2021.01.011 Publication Date: 2021-01-14T01:43:40Z
ABSTRACT
During severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection, dramatic endothelial cell damage with pulmonary microvascular thrombosis have been was hypothesized to occur. The aim was to assess whether pulmonary vascular thrombosis (PVT) is due to recurrent thromboembolism from peripheral deep vein thrombosis or to local inflammatory endothelial damage, with a superimposed thrombotic late complication.Observational study.Medical and intensive care unit wards of a teaching hospital.The authors report a subset of patients included in a prospective institutional study (CovidBiob study) with clinical suspicion of pulmonary vascular thromboembolism.Computed tomography pulmonary angiography and evaluation of laboratory markers and coagulation profile.Twenty-eight of 55 (50.9%) patients showed PVT, with a median time interval from symptom onset of 17.5 days. Simultaneous multiple PVTs were identified in 22 patients, with bilateral involvement in 16, mostly affecting segmental/subsegmental pulmonary artery branches (67.8% and 96.4%). Patients with PVT had significantly higher ground glass opacity areas (31.7% [22.9-41] v 17.8% [10.8-22.1], p < 0.001) compared with those without PVT. Remarkably, in all 28 patients, ground glass opacities areas and PVT had an almost perfect spatial overlap. D-dimer level at hospital admission was predictive of PVT.The findings identified a specific radiologic pattern of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pneumonia with a unique spatial distribution of PVT overlapping areas of ground-glass opacities. These findings supported the hypothesis of a pathogenetic relationship between COVID-19 lung inflammation and PVT and challenged the previous definition of pulmonary embolism associated with COVID-19 pneumonia.
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