Litcius/Paper detail

Forty Postmortem Examinations in COVID-19 Patients

Simona De Michele, Yu Sun, Mine Yilmaz, Igor Katsyv, Mary Salvatore, Amy Dzierba, Charles C. Marboe, Daniel Brodie, Nina Patel, Christine Kim Garcia, Anjali Saqi

2020American Journal of Clinical Pathology98 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Although diffuse alveolar damage, a subtype of acute lung injury (ALI), is the most common microscopic pattern in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), other pathologic patterns have been described. The aim of the study was to review autopsies from COVID-19 decedents to evaluate the spectrum of pathology and correlate the results with clinical, laboratory, and radiologic findings. METHODS: A comprehensive and quantitative review from 40 postmortem examinations was performed. The microscopic patterns were categorized as follows: "major" when present in more than 50% of cases and "novel" if rarely or not previously described and unexpected clinically. RESULTS: Three major pulmonary patterns were identified: ALI in 29 (73%) of 40, intravascular fibrin or platelet-rich aggregates (IFPAs) in 36 (90%) of 40, and vascular congestion and hemangiomatosis-like change (VCHL) in 20 (50%) of 40. The absence of ALI (non-ALI) was novel and seen in 11 (27%) of 40. Compared with ALI decedents, those with non-ALI had a shorter hospitalization course (P = .02), chest radiographs with no or minimal consolidation (P = .01), and no pathologically confirmed cause of death (9/11). All non-ALI had VCHL and IFPAs, and clinically most had cardiac arrest. CONCLUSIONS: Two distinct pulmonary phenotypic patterns-ALI and non-ALI-were noted. Non-ALI represents a rarely described phenotype. The cause of death in non-ALI is most likely COVID-19 related but requires additional corroboration.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineAutopsyPathologyCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)Cause of deathDiffuse alveolar damageLungDiseaseInternal medicineInfectious disease (medical specialty)Acute respiratory distressCOVID-19 Clinical Research StudiesPneumothorax, Barotrauma, EmphysemaInterstitial Lung Diseases and Idiopathic Pulmonary Fibrosis