PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Acute myocardial infarction in the Covid-19 era: Incidence, clinical characteristics and in-hospital outcomes-A multicenter registry.

  • Alexander Fardman,
  • Doron Zahger,
  • Katia Orvin,
  • Daniel Oren,
  • Natalia Kofman,
  • Jameel Mohsen,
  • Or Tsafrir,
  • Elad Asher,
  • Ronen Rubinshtein,
  • Jafari Jamal,
  • Roi Efraim,
  • Majdi Halabi,
  • Yacov Shacham,
  • Lior Henri Fortis,
  • Tal Cohen,
  • Robert Klempfner,
  • Amit Segev,
  • Roy Beigel,
  • Shlomi Matetzky

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0253524
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. e0253524

Abstract

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BackgroundWe aimed to describe the characteristics and in-hospital outcomes of ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients during the Covid-19 era.MethodsWe conducted a prospective, multicenter study involving 13 intensive cardiac care units, to evaluate consecutive STEMI patients admitted throughout an 8-week period during the Covid-19 outbreak. These patients were compared with consecutive STEMI patients admitted during the corresponding period in 2018 who had been prospectively documented in the Israeli bi-annual National Acute Coronary Syndrome Survey. The primary end-point was defined as a composite of malignant arrhythmia, congestive heart failure, and/or in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes included individual components of primary outcome, cardiogenic shock, mechanical complications, electrical complications, re-infarction, stroke, and pericarditis.ResultsThe study cohort comprised 1466 consecutive acute MI patients, of whom 774 (53%) were hospitalized during the Covid-19 outbreak. Overall, 841 patients were diagnosed with STEMI: 424 (50.4%) during the Covid-19 era and 417 (49.6%) during the parallel period in 2018. Although STEMI patients admitted during the Covid-19 period had fewer co-morbidities, they presented with a higher Killip class (p value = .03). The median time from symptom onset to reperfusion was extended from 180 minutes (IQR 122-292) in 2018 to 290 minutes (IQR 161-1080, p ConclusionsSTEMI patients admitted during the first wave of Covid-19 outbreak, experienced longer total ischemic time, which was translated into a more severe disease status upon hospital admission, and a higher rate of in-hospital adverse events, compared with parallel period.