Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Jan 2023)

Electrocardiographic Pathological Findings Caused by the SARS-CoV-2 Virus Infection: Evidence from a Retrospective Multicenter International Cohort Longitudinal Pilot Study of 548 Subjects

  • Nicola Susca,
  • Antonio Giovanni Solimando,
  • Paola Borrelli,
  • Donatello Marziliano,
  • Francesco Monitillo,
  • Pasquale Raimondo,
  • Domenico Vestito,
  • Agostino Lopizzo,
  • Gaetano Brindicci,
  • Mohammad Abumayyaleh,
  • Ibrahim El-Battrawy,
  • Annalisa Saracino,
  • Salvatore Grasso,
  • Natale Daniele Brunetti,
  • Vito Racanelli,
  • Francesco Santoro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd10020058
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 58

Abstract

Read online

COVID-19 has threatened the capability of receiving and allocating patients in emergency departments (EDs) all over the world. This is a retrospective cohort study to explore the role of a simple procedure like an ECG to screen for the severity of COVID-19 on admission to the ED. For this study, 548 consecutive patients were enrolled in a multicenter international registry and stratified upon ECG on admission with a simple distinction between normal vs. abnormal rhythm. Among patients in the abnormal ECG group were those with heart rates higher than 100 beats per minute and/or atrial fibrillation. Survival in patients with normal ECG rhythm was deemed below 75% after 58 days and then stabilized, while survival in patients with abnormal ECG rhythm was deemed below 75% after 11 days and below 50% after 21 days. A multivariate analysis including abnormal rhythm, gender, age, diabetes, obesity, respiratory failure during hospitalization, heart failure during hospitalization, and abnormal rhythm was an independent predictor of death (HR 7.20 95% CI 3.63–14.28, p < 0.01). This finding, if confirmed in large prospective studies, is promising for identifying a cheap and simple procedure for patients in need of a closer look.

Keywords