Characterization of myocardial injury in a cohort of patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection

Myocardial injury has been identified as a common complication in patients with COVID-19. However, recent research has serious limitations, such as non-guideline definition of myocardial injury, heterogenicity of troponin sampling or very short-term follow-up. Using data from a large European cohort...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicina clinica 2021-09, Vol.157 (6), p.274-280
Hauptverfasser: Caro-Codón, Juan, Rey, Juan R., Buño, Antonio, Iniesta, Angel M., Rosillo, Sandra O., Castrejon-Castrejon, Sergio, Merino, Carlos, Marco, Irene, Martinez, Luis A., Garcia-Veas, Jose M., Martin-Polo, Lorena, Rodriguez-Sotelo, Laura, Martinez-Cossiani, Marcel, Gonzalez-Valle, Luis, Herrero, Alicia, López-de-Sá, Esteban, Merino, Jose L.
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Zusammenfassung:Myocardial injury has been identified as a common complication in patients with COVID-19. However, recent research has serious limitations, such as non-guideline definition of myocardial injury, heterogenicity of troponin sampling or very short-term follow-up. Using data from a large European cohort, we aimed to overcome these pitfalls and adequately characterize myocardial damage in COVID-19. Consecutive patients with confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection and available high-sensitive troponin I (hs-TnI), from March 1st to April 20th, 2020 who completed at least 1-month follow-up or died, were studied. A total of 918 patients (mean age 63.2±15.5 years, 60.1% male) with a median follow-up of 57 (49–63) days were included. Of these, 190 (20.7%) fulfilled strict criteria for myocardial injury (21.1% chronic, 76.8% acute non-ischemic, 2.1% acute ischemic). Time from onset of symptoms to maximum hs-TnI was 11 (7–18) days. Thrombotic and bleeding events, arrhythmias, heart failure, need for mechanical ventilation and death were significantly more prevalent in patients with higher hs-TnI concentrations, even without fulfilling criteria for myocardial injury. hs-TnI was identified as an independent predictor of mortality [HR 2.52 (1.57–4.04) per 5-logarithmic units increment] after adjusting for multiple relevant covariates. Elevated hs-TnI is highly prevalent among patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection. Even mild elevations well below the 99th URL were significantly associated with higher rates of cardiac and non-cardiac complications, and higher mortality. Future research should address the role of serial hs-TnI assessment to improve COVID-19 prognostic stratification and clinical outcomes. El daño miocárdico parece una complicación frecuente en pacientes con COVID-19. Sin embargo, la literatura al respecto presenta serias limitaciones, como definiciones incorrectas, heterogeneidad de las determinaciones de troponina o seguimientos cortos. Utilizando datos de una cohorte amplia, el objetivo del trabajo fue caracterizar adecuadamente el daño miocárdico en pacientes con COVID-19 utilizando una metodología adecuada. Se estudió a pacientes consecutivos con infección confirmada y determinaciones disponibles de troponina I de alta sensibilidad (hs-TnI), desde el 1 de marzo hasta el 20 de abril del 2020, que hubieran completado al menos un mes de seguimiento o fallecieran durante el periodo de estudio. Se incluyó a 918 pacientes (edad 63,2±15,5 años, 60,1% varones) con un seguim
ISSN:0025-7753
1578-8989
DOI:10.1016/j.medcli.2021.02.001