This study aimed to describe the chest CT findings in patients with COVID-19 pneumonia who had initially tested negative by NP/OP swab. The final goal is to assist physicians to avoid missed or delayed diagnoses of SARS-CoV-2 infection.
Out of 453 patients admitted to the ED and administered chest CT during the study period, 159 had a confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19 pneumonia, according to WHO guidance. In 28 of these confirmed cases (mean age, 64 ± 15 years; male/female, 18/10), the patients initially tested negative by RT-PCR (study group). SARS-CoV-2 infection was confirmed in these patients by repeated NO/OP swab test (nineteen cases) and bronchoalveolar lavage test (nine cases) over a 6-day duration (range, 3---8 days). Unilateral lung involvement was detected in 20 out of the 28 cases. Radiologic abnormalities had peripheral distribution in 27 cases (96%) and involved two or more lobes
in four cases (14%). Unilateral GGOs with or without consolidations or crazy paving were significantly more common among patients in the study group compared with those who initially tested positive (19/28 vs. 6/131; p < 0.0001)