Sensitivity of Lung Point-of-Care Ultrasound (POCUS) to Predict Oxygen Requirements in Emerging Viral Infections

J Ultrasound Med. 2025 Jan 21. doi: 10.1002/jum.16647. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Objectives: The prognostic characteristics of lung point-of-care ultrasound (L-POCUS) to predict respiratory decompensation in patients with emerging infections remains unstudied. Our objective was to examine whether scored lung ultrasounds predict hypoxia among a nonhypoxic, ambulatory population of patients with COVID-19.

Methods: This was a diagnostic case-control study. Three academic emergency departments across the United States collected a convenience sample of nonhypoxic subjects with COVID-19, scored subjects' hemithorax at 7 locations using lung ultrasound, and followed outcomes for 40 days. We defined cases as hypoxia (≤91% by pulse oxygenation) from 2 hours after index presentation to day 40. Follow-up was by telephone plus home pulse oximeter and by chart review. We conducted a logistic regression to test the association between L-POCUS scores and hypoxia. To evaluate lung ultrasound score prediction of a hypoxic event, we calculated sensitivity and specificity at optimal cut off scores and report receiver operating characteristic curve and area under the curve.

Results: We enrolled 163 subjects but excluded 15 (3 duplicate entries; 12 lost to follow up). Median age was 41 years (interquartile range [IQR] 31-56); 83 (56%) were female, and median body mass index was 29 (IQR 25-35). We classified 47 of 148 as hypoxic cases (32%, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 25-40), leaving 101 controls. L-POCUS scores associated with hypoxia by logistic regression (odds ratio = 1.05, 95% CI: 1.02-1.08), with a 5% increase in odds of hypoxia for each 1-unit increase in L-POCUS score. The optimal cut-off score was 15 (sensitivity, 0.60; specificity, 0.73) and the area under the curve was 0·66 (95% CI 0·58-0·75). The correctly classified proportion was 69% (95% CI: 61-76).

Conclusions: Among nonhypoxic COVID-19 patients, higher L-POCUS rubric scores were associated with hypoxia but no scoring threshold strongly predicts hypoxia at 40 days.

Keywords: diagnostic imaging; pneumonia‐viral; prognosis.