Frontiers in Medicine (Jun 2022)

Cardiovascular Biomarkers for Prediction of in-hospital and 1-Year Post-discharge Mortality in Patients With COVID-19 Pneumonia

  • Lukas J. Motloch,
  • Peter Jirak,
  • Diana Gareeva,
  • Diana Gareeva,
  • Paruir Davtyan,
  • Paruir Davtyan,
  • Ruslan Gumerov,
  • Ruslan Gumerov,
  • Irina Lakman,
  • Irina Lakman,
  • Irina Lakman,
  • Irina Lakman,
  • Aleksandr Tataurov,
  • Rustem Zulkarneev,
  • Ildar Kabirov,
  • Benzhi Cai,
  • Benzhi Cai,
  • Bairas Valeev,
  • Valentin Pavlov,
  • Valentin Pavlov,
  • Kristen Kopp,
  • Uta C. Hoppe,
  • Michael Lichtenauer,
  • Lukas Fiedler,
  • Lukas Fiedler,
  • Rudin Pistulli,
  • Naufal Zagidullin,
  • Naufal Zagidullin,
  • Naufal Zagidullin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2022.906665
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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AimsWhile COVID-19 affects the cardiovascular system, the potential clinical impact of cardiovascular biomarkers on predicting outcomes in COVID-19 patients is still unknown. Therefore, to investigate this issue we analyzed the prognostic potential of cardiac biomarkers on in-hospital and long-term post-discharge mortality of patients with COVID-19 pneumonia.MethodsSerum soluble ST2, VCAM-1, and hs-TnI were evaluated upon admission in 280 consecutive patients hospitalized with COVID-19-associated pneumonia in a single, tertiary care center. Patient clinical and laboratory characteristics and the concentration of biomarkers were correlated with in-hospital [Hospital stay: 11 days (10; 14)] and post-discharge all-cause mortality at 1 year follow-up [FU: 354 days (342; 361)].Results11 patients died while hospitalized for COVID-19 (3.9%), and 11 patients died during the 1-year post-discharge follow-up period (n = 11, 4.1%). Using multivariate analysis, VCAM-1 was shown to predict mortality during the hospital period (HR 1.081, CI 95% 1.035;1.129, p = 0.017), but not ST2 or hs-TnI. In contrast, during one-year FU post hospital discharge, ST2 (HR 1.006, 95% CI 1.002;1.009, p < 0.001) and hs-TnI (HR 1.362, 95% CI 1.050;1.766, p = 0.024) predicted mortality, although not VCAM-1.ConclusionIn patients hospitalized with Covid-19 pneumonia, elevated levels of VCAM-1 at admission were associated with in-hospital mortality, while ST2 and hs-TnI might predict post-discharge mortality in long term follow-up.

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