Systematic lung ultrasound in Omicron-type vs. wild-type COVID-19
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
Preliminary data suggested that patients with Omicron-type-Coronavirus-disease-2019 (COVID-19) have less severe lung disease compared with the wild-type-variant. We aimed to compare lung ultrasound (LUS) parameters in Omicron vs. wild-type COVID-19 and evaluate their prognostic implications.
One hundred and sixty-two consecutive patients with Omicron-type-COVID-19 underwent LUS within 48 h of admission and were compared with propensity-matched wild-type patients (148 pairs). In the Omicron patients median, first and third quartiles of the LUS-score was 5 [2–12], and only 9% had normal LUS. The majority had either mild (≤5; 37%) or moderate (6–15; 39%), and 15% (≥15) had severe LUS-score. Thirty-six percent of patients had patchy pleural thickening (PPT). Factors associated with LUS-score in the Omicron patients included ischaemic-heart-disease, heart failure, renal-dysfunction, and C-reactive protein. Elevated left-filling pressure or right-sided pressures were associated with the LUS-score. Lung ultrasound-score was associated with mortality [odds ratio (OR): 1.09, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.01–1.18;
Lung ultrasound-score is abnormal in the majority of hospitalized Omicron-type patients. Patchy pleural thickening is less common than in matched wild-type patients, but the difference is diminished in the non-vaccinated Omicron patients. Nevertheless, even in this milder form of the disease, the LUS-score is associated with poor in-hospital outcomes.
Contributors

Ariel Banai
Author

Lior Lupu
Author

Aviel Shetrit
Author

Yael Lichter
Author

Erez Levi
Author

Yishay Szekely
Author

Nadav Schellekes
Author

Tammy Jacoby
Author

David Zahler
Author

Tamar Itach
Author

Philippe Taieb
Author

Sheizaf Gefen
Author

Dana Viskin
Author

Lia Shidlansik
Author

Amos Adler
Author

Ekaterina Levitsky
Author

Ofer Havakuk
Author

Shmuel Banai
Author

Eihab Ghantous
Author



