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Coronary and total thoracic calcium scores predict mortality and provides pathophysiologic insights in COVID-19 patients.

Authors :
Giannini, Francesco
Toselli, Marco
Palmisano, Anna
Cereda, Alberto
Vignale, Davide
Leone, Riccardo
Nicoletti, Valeria
Gnasso, Chiara
Monello, Alberto
Manfrini, Marco
Khokhar, Arif
Sticchi, Alessandro
Biagi, Andrea
Turchio, Piergiorgio
Tacchetti, Carlo
Landoni, Giovanni
Boccia, Edda
Campo, Gianluca
Scoccia, Alessandra
Ponticelli, Francesco
Source :
Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography; Sep2021, Vol. 15 Issue 5, p421-430, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has spread worldwide determining dramatic impacts on healthcare systems. Early identification of high-risk parameters is required in order to provide the best therapeutic approach. Coronary, thoracic aorta and aortic valve calcium can be measured from a non-gated chest computer tomography (CT) and are validated predictors of cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality. However, their prognostic role in acute systemic inflammatory diseases, such as COVID-19, has not been investigated. The aim was to evaluate the association of coronary artery calcium and total thoracic calcium on in-hospital mortality in COVID-19 patients. 1093 consecutive patients from 16 Italian hospitals with a positive swab for COVID-19 and an admission chest CT for pneumonia severity assessment were included. At CT, coronary, aortic valve and thoracic aorta calcium were qualitatively and quantitatively evaluated separately and combined together (total thoracic calcium) by a central Core-lab blinded to patients' outcomes. Non-survivors compared to survivors had higher coronary artery [Agatston (467.76 ​± ​570.92 vs 206.80 ​± ​424.13 ​mm<superscript>2</superscript>, p ​< ​0.001); Volume (487.79 ​± ​565.34 vs 207.77 ​± ​406.81, p ​< ​0.001)], aortic valve [Volume (322.45 ​± ​390.90 vs 98.27 ​± ​250.74 mm<superscript>2</superscript>, p ​< ​0.001; Agatston 337.38 ​± ​414.97 vs 111.70 ​± ​282.15, p ​< ​0.001)] and thoracic aorta [Volume (3786.71 ​± ​4225.57 vs 1487.63 ​± ​2973.19 mm<superscript>2</superscript>, p ​< ​0.001); Agatston (4688.82 ​± ​5363.72 vs 1834.90 ​± ​3761.25, p ​< ​0.001)] calcium values. Coronary artery calcium (HR 1.308; 95% CI, 1.046–1.637, p ​= ​0.019) and total thoracic calcium (HR 1.975; 95% CI, 1.200–3.251, p ​= ​0.007) resulted to be independent predictors of in-hospital mortality. Coronary, aortic valve and thoracic aortic calcium assessment on admission non-gated CT permits to stratify the COVID-19 patients in-hospital mortality risk. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19345925
Volume :
15
Issue :
5
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152042218
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcct.2021.03.003