A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Baseline Chest Computed Tomography as Standard of Care in High-Risk Hematology Patients




AuthorsStemler J., Bruns C., Mellinghoff S.C., Alakel N., Akan H., Ananda‐rajah M., Auberger J., Bojko P., Chandrasekar P.H., Chayakulkeeree M., Cozzi J.A., de Kort E.A., Groll A.H., Heath C.H., Henze L., Jimenez M.H., Kanj S.S., Khanna N., Koldehoff M., Lee D.-G., Mager A., Marchesi F., Martino‐bufarull R., Nucci M., Oksi J., Pagano L., Phillips B., Prattes J., Pyrpasopoulou A., Rabitsch W., Schalk E., Schmidt‐hieber M., Sidharthan N., Soler‐palacín P., Stern A., Weinbergerová B., El Zakhem A., Cornely O.A., Koehler P.

PublisherMDPI

Publication year2020

JournalJournal of Fungi

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF FUNGI

Journal acronymJ FUNGI

Volume6

Issue1

Number of pages13

eISSN2309-608X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3390/jof6010036

Web address https://www.mdpi.com/2309-608X/6/1/36

Self-archived copy’s web addresshttps://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/47750463


Abstract
Baseline chest computed tomography (BCT) in high-risk hematology patients allows for the early diagnosis of invasive pulmonary aspergillosis (IPA). The distribution of BCT implementation in hematology departments and impact on outcome is unknown. A web-based questionnaire was designed. International scientific bodies were invited. The estimated numbers of annually treated hematology patients, chest imaging timepoints and techniques, IPA rates, and follow-up imaging were assessed. In total, 142 physicians from 43 countries participated. The specialties included infectious diseases (n = 69; 49%), hematology (n = 68; 48%), and others (n = 41; 29%). BCT was performed in 57% (n = 54) of 92 hospitals. Upon the diagnosis of malignancy or admission, 48% and 24% performed BCT, respectively, and X-ray was performed in 48% and 69%, respectively. BCT was more often used in hematopoietic cell transplantation and in relapsed acute leukemia. European centers performed BCT in 59% and non-European centers in 53%. Median estimated IPA rate was 8% and did not differ between BCT (9%; IQR 5-15%) and non-BCT centers (7%; IQR 5-10%) (p = 0.69). Follow-up computed tomography (CT) for IPA was performed in 98% (n = 90) of centers. In high-risk hematology patients, baseline CT is becoming a standard-of-care. Chest X-ray, while inferior, is still widely used. Randomized, controlled trials are needed to investigate the impact of BCT on patient outcome.

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