Back to Search Start Over

COVID‐19 infection in patients with history of pediatric heart transplant in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.

Authors :
Ulrich, Sarah
Balmer, Christian
Becker, Kolja
Bruhs, Josefin
Danne, Friederike
Debus, Volker
Dewein, Leonie
Di‐Bernardo, Stefano
Doll, Ulrike
Fleck, Thilo
Tirilomis, Theodor
Glöckler, Martin
Grafmann, Maria
Greil, Sabine
Grosser, Urte
Saur, Patrick
Skrzypek, Susanne
Steinmetz, Michael
Source :
Clinical Transplantation. Mar2024, Vol. 38 Issue 3, p1-7. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

COVID‐19 is a heterogenous infection—asymptomatic to fatal. While the course of pediatric COVID‐19 infections is usually mild or even asymptomatic, individuals after adult heart transplantation are at high risk of a severe infection. We conducted a retrospective, multicenter survey of 16 pediatric heart transplant centers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland to evaluate the risk of a severe COVID‐19 infection after pediatric heart transplantation between 02/2020 and 06/2021. Twenty‐six subjects (11 male) with a median age of 9.77 years at time of transplantation and a median of 4.65 years after transplantation suffered from COVID‐19 infection. The median age at time of COVID‐10 infection was 17.20 years. Fourteen subjects had an asymptomatic COVID‐19 infection. The most frequent symptoms were myalgia/fatigue (n = 6), cough (n = 5), rhinitis (n = 5), and loss of taste (n = 5). Only one subject showed dyspnea. Eleven individuals needed therapy in an outpatient setting, four subjects were hospitalized. One person needed oxygen supply, none of the subjects needed non‐invasive or invasive mechanical ventilation. No specific signs for graft dysfunction were found by non‐invasive testing. In pediatric heart transplant subjects, COVID‐19 infection was mostly asymptomatic or mild. There were no SARS‐CoV‐2 associated myocardial dysfunction in heart transplant individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09020063
Volume :
38
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Clinical Transplantation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176213565
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/ctr.15272