Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2021)

The Spectrum of COVID-19-Associated Myocarditis: A Patient-Tailored Multidisciplinary Approach

  • Giovanni Peretto,
  • Andrea Villatore,
  • Stefania Rizzo,
  • Antonio Esposito,
  • Giacomo De Luca,
  • Anna Palmisano,
  • Davide Vignale,
  • Alberto Maria Cappelletti,
  • Moreno Tresoldi,
  • Corrado Campochiaro,
  • Silvia Sartorelli,
  • Marco Ripa,
  • Monica De Gaspari,
  • Elena Busnardo,
  • Paola Ferro,
  • Maria Grazia Calabrò,
  • Evgeny Fominskiy,
  • Fabrizio Monaco,
  • Giulio Cavalli,
  • Luigi Gianolli,
  • Francesco De Cobelli,
  • Alberto Margonato,
  • Lorenzo Dagna,
  • Mara Scandroglio,
  • Paolo Guido Camici,
  • Patrizio Mazzone,
  • Paolo Della Bella,
  • Cristina Basso,
  • Simone Sala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10091974
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 9
p. 1974

Abstract

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Background. Myocarditis lacks systematic characterization in COVID-19 patients. Methods. We enrolled consecutive patients with newly diagnosed myocarditis in the context of COVID-19 infection. Diagnostic and treatment strategies were driven by a dedicated multidisciplinary disease unit for myocarditis. Multimodal outcomes were assessed during prospective follow-up. Results. Seven consecutive patients (57% males, age 51 ± 9 y) with acute COVID-19 infection received a de novo diagnosis of myocarditis. Endomyocardial biopsy was of choice in hemodynamically unstable patients (n = 4, mean left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) 25 ± 9%), whereas cardiac magnetic resonance constituted the first exam in stable patients (n = 3, mean LVEF 48 ± 10%). Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis revealed an intra-myocardial SARS-CoV-2 genome in one of the six cases undergoing biopsy: in the remaining patients, myocarditis was either due to other viruses (n = 2) or virus-negative (n = 3). Hemodynamic support was needed for four unstable patients (57%), whereas a cardiac device implant was chosen in two of four cases showing ventricular arrhythmias. Medical treatment included immunosuppression (43%) and biological therapy (29%). By the 6-month median follow-up, no patient died or experienced malignant arrhythmias. However, two cases (29%) were screened for heart transplantation. Conclusions. Myocarditis associated with acute COVID-19 infection is a spectrum of clinical manifestations and underlying etiologies. A multidisciplinary approach is the cornerstone for tailored management.

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