학술논문

Abstract 15960: Mortality Differences Among Myocardial Injury Subtypes in Acute COVID-19, the Omicron Wave Was Different
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Circulation. Nov 07, 2023 148(Suppl_1 Suppl 1):A15960-A15960
Subject
Language
English
ISSN
0009-7322
Abstract
Introduction: Hospitalization for COVID-19 is often associated with myocardial injury (elevated cardiac troponin [cTn]). In the initial pandemic waves, patients with myocardial injury had increased likelihood of cardiovascular complications and inpatient mortality; however, the differences in impact of distinct subtypes of myocardial injury on mortality is unclear. In addition, little is known about how these outcomes compare with the subsequent, milder, Omicron wave.Methods: Utilizing Mayo Clinic enterprise patients we developed algorithms based on diagnostic/procedural codes, cTn levels, and temporal relationships to positive COVID-19 PCR tests, to determine 5 common subtypes of myocardial injury: stress cardiomyopathy, myocarditis, pericarditis, pulmonary embolism, and myocardial infarction. We examined hospitalized adults with COVID-19; those with elevated cTn designated as cases and others as controls. We fitted Cox models using the following covariates: spline transformed age, sex, race, ethnicity, index date and clinical comorbidities. Patients were analyzed based on admission dates coinciding with either the Alpha-Delta or Omicron waves.Results: Across both wave cohorts, hospitalized patients with acute COVID-19 complicated by myocardial injury had an increased risk of mortality compared to those without (Figure). Patients with one of the 5 subtypes examined tended to have higher risk than those in the “other myocardial injury” category. Admission during the Omicron wave, compared to the Alpha-Delta waves, tended to have higher mortality risk in all subtypes except myocarditis.Conclusions: Our algorithms successfully identified subgroups of myocardial injury in patients hospitalized with acute COVID-19 leading to stratification of mortality risk. Surprisingly, among hospitalized patients during the Omicron wave, myocardial injury of most subtypes was tended to have increased risk of mortality compared to the Alpha-Delta waves.