Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has shown the importance of postmortem investigation of deceased patients. For a correct interpretation of the pulmonary findings in this new era, it is, however, crucial to be familiar with pathologic pulmonary conditions observed in postmortem investigations in general. Adequate postmortem histopathological evaluation of the lungs may be affected by suboptimal gross work up, autolysis or poor fixation. Using a standardized preparation approach which consisted in instillation of 4% buffered formaldehyde through the large bronchi for proper fixation and preparing large frontal tissue sections of 1–2 cm thickness after at least 24 h fixation, we comprehensively analyzed postmortem pulmonary findings from consecutive adult autopsies of a two-year period before the occurrence of COVID-19 (2016–2017). In total, significant pathological findings were observed in 97/189 patients (51%), with 28 patients showing more than one pathologic condition. Acute pneumonia was diagnosed 33/128 times (26%), embolism 24 times (19%), primary pulmonary neoplasms 18 times (14%), organizing pneumonia and other fibrosing conditions 14 times (11%), pulmonary metastases 13 times (10%), diffuse alveolar damage 12 times (9%), severe emphysema 9 times (7%) and other pathologies, e.g., amyloidosis 5/128 times (4%). Pulmonary/cardiopulmonary disease was the cause of death in 60 patients (32%). Clinical and pathological diagnoses regarding lung findings correlated completely in 75 patients (40%). Autopsy led to confirmation of a clinically suspected pulmonary diagnosis in 57 patients (39%) and clarification of an unclear clinical lung finding in 16 patients (8%). Major discrepant findings regarding the lungs (N = 31; 16%) comprised cases with clinical suspicions that could not be confirmed or new findings not diagnosed intra vitam. A significant proportion of acute pneumonias (N = 8; 24% of all cases with this diagnosis; p = 0.011) was not diagnosed clinically. We confirmed the frequent occurrence of pulmonary pathologies in autopsies, including inflammatory and neoplastic lesions as the most frequent pathological findings. Acute pneumonia was an important cause for discrepancy between clinical and postmortem diagnostics

Highlights

  • The recent advent of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has turned the focus on pulmonary findings of deceased patients

  • We present a comprehensive single center study on postmortem pulmonary pathology findings in 189 adults obtained during a two-year period from 2016–2017

  • This descriptive explorative study highlights the high frequency and variety of pulmonary pathologic findings obtained from postmortem investigations applying a standardized preparation technique for postmortem diagnostics of the lungs that allows excellent macroscopical and histopathological evaluation

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Summary

Introduction

The recent advent of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has turned the focus on pulmonary findings of deceased patients. Postmortem investigations of the lungs of COVID-19 patients have contributed significantly to the understanding of this disease [1,2,3,4] Apart from this recent development, pathological pulmonary findings in adults are frequently encountered at postmortem examinations, either as the leading cause of death [5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13] or as a secondary significant finding, unrelated to the cause of death. Discrepancy between clinical and postmortem pathologic findings is well-known [6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]

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