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Constructing custom-made radiotranscriptomic signatures of vascular inflammation from routine CT angiograms: a prospective outcomes validation study in COVID-19.

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posted on 2022-11-08, 14:46 authored by Christos P Kotanidis, Cheng Xie, Donna Alexander, Jonathan CL Rodrigues, Katie Burnham, Alexander Mentzer, Daniel O'Connor, Julian Knight, Muhammad Siddique, Helen Lockstone, Sheena Thomas, Rafail Kotronias, Evangelos K Oikonomou, Ileana Badi, Maria Lyasheva, Cheerag Shirodaria, Sheila F Lumley, Bede Constantinides, Nicholas Sanderson, Gillian Rodger, Kevin K Chau, Archie Lodge, Maria Tsakok, Fergus Gleeson, David Adlam, Praveen Rao, Das Indrajeet, Aparna Deshpande, Amrita Bajaj, Benjamin J Hudson, Vivek Srivastava, Shakil Farid, George Krasopoulos, Rana Sayeed, Ling-Pei Ho, Stefan Neubauer, David E Newby, Keith M Channon, John Deanfield, Charalambos Antoniades, COMBAT Consortium, ORFAN investigators

Background

Direct evaluation of vascular inflammation in patients with COVID-19 would facilitate more efficient trials of new treatments and identify patients at risk of long-term complications who might respond to treatment. We aimed to develop a novel artificial intelligence (AI)-assisted image analysis platform that quantifies cytokine-driven vascular inflammation from routine CT angiograms, and sought to validate its prognostic value in COVID-19.

Methods

For this prospective outcomes validation study, we developed a radiotranscriptomic platform that uses RNA sequencing data from human internal mammary artery biopsies to develop novel radiomic signatures of vascular inflammation from CT angiography images. We then used this platform to train a radiotranscriptomic signature (C19-RS), derived from the perivascular space around the aorta and the internal mammary artery, to best describe cytokine-driven vascular inflammation. The prognostic value of C19-RS was validated externally in 435 patients (331 from study arm 3 and 104 from study arm 4) admitted to hospital with or without COVID-19, undergoing clinically indicated pulmonary CT angiography, in three UK National Health Service (NHS) trusts (Oxford, Leicester, and Bath). We evaluated the diagnostic and prognostic value of C19-RS for death in hospital due to COVID-19, did sensitivity analyses based on dexamethasone treatment, and investigated the correlation of C19-RS with systemic transcriptomic changes.

Findings

Patients with COVID-19 had higher C19-RS than those without (adjusted odds ratio [OR] 2·97 [95% CI 1·43-6·27], p=0·0038), and those infected with the B.1.1.7 (alpha) SARS-CoV-2 variant had higher C19-RS values than those infected with the wild-type SARS-CoV-2 variant (adjusted OR 1·89 [95% CI 1·17-3·20] per SD, p=0·012). C19-RS had prognostic value for in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 in two testing cohorts (high [≥6·99] vs low [<6·99] C19-RS; hazard ratio [HR] 3·31 [95% CI 1·49-7·33], p=0·0033; and 2·58 [1·10-6·05], p=0·028), adjusted for clinical factors, biochemical biomarkers of inflammation and myocardial injury, and technical parameters. The adjusted HR for in-hospital mortality was 8·24 (95% CI 2·16-31·36, p=0·0019) in patients who received no dexamethasone treatment, but 2·27 (0·69-7·55, p=0·18) in those who received dexamethasone after the scan, suggesting that vascular inflammation might have been a therapeutic target of dexamethasone in COVID-19. Finally, C19-RS was strongly associated (r=0·61, p=0·00031) with a whole blood transcriptional module representing dysregulation of coagulation and platelet aggregation pathways.

Interpretation

Radiotranscriptomic analysis of CT angiography scans introduces a potentially powerful new platform for the development of non-invasive imaging biomarkers. Application of this platform in routine CT pulmonary angiography scans done in patients with COVID-19 produced the radiotranscriptomic signature C19-RS, a marker of cytokine-driven inflammation driving systemic activation of coagulation and responsible for adverse clinical outcomes, which predicts in-hospital mortality and might allow targeted therapy.

Funding

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, British Heart Foundation, Oxford BHF Centre of Research Excellence, Innovate UK, NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre, Wellcome Trust, Onassis Foundation.

History

Author affiliation

Department of Cardiovascular Sciences and NIHR Leicester Biomedical Research Centre, University of Leicester

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

The Lancet Digital Health

Volume

4

Issue

10

Pagination

e705 - e716

Publisher

Elsevier BV

issn

2589-7500

eissn

2589-7500

Copyright date

2022

Available date

2022-11-08

Spatial coverage

England

Language

eng

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