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Impact of COVID-19 pandemic and infection on in hospital survival for patients presenting with acute coronary syndromes: A multicenter registry

Authors :
Pier Paolo Bocchino
Fabrizio D'Ascenzo
Andrea Borin
Paolo Vadalà
Alaide Chieffo
Giuseppe Musumeci
Gaetano M. De Ferrari
Carlo Andrea Pivato
Daniela Trabattoni
Giuseppe Patti
Nicola Gaibazzi
Luca Gaido
Ovidio De Filippo
Lucia Barbieri
Alessandra Truffa Giachet
Gianluca Campo
Andrea Rubboli
Marianna Adamo
Fabrizio Ugo
Nuccia Morici
Andrea Rognoni
Filippo Angelini
Veronica Dusi
Bernardo Cortese
Guglielmo Gallone
Sebastiano Gili
Gabriele Crimi
Mario Iannaccone
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Introduction The impact of Covid-19 on the survival of patients presenting with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) remains to be defined. Methods Consecutive patients presenting with ACS at 18 Centers in Northern-Italy during the Covid-19 outbreak were included. In-hospital all-cause death was the primary outcome. In-hospital cardiovascular death along with mechanical and electrical complications were the secondary ones. A case period (February 20, 2020-May 3, 2020) was compared vs. same-year (January 1–February 19, 2020) and previous-year control periods (February 20–May 3, 2019). ACS patients with Covid-19 were further compared with those without. Results Among 779 ACS patients admitted during the case period, 67 (8.6%) tested positive for Covid-19. In-hospital all-cause mortality was significantly higher during the case period compared to the control periods (6.4% vs. 3.5% vs. 4.4% respectively; p 0.026), but similar after excluding patients with COVID-19 (4.5% vs. 3.5% vs. 4.4%; p 0.73). Cardiovascular mortality was similar between the study groups. After multivariable adjustment, admission for ACS during the COVID-19 outbreak had no impact on in-hospital mortality. In the case period, patients with concomitant ACS and Covid-19 experienced significantly higher in-hospital mortality (25% vs. 5%, p Conclusion ACS patients presenting during the Covid-19 pandemic experienced increased all-cause mortality, driven by Covid-19 positive status due to higher rates of cardiogenic shock and sustained ventricular tachycardia. No differences in cardiovascular mortality compared to non-pandemic scenarios were reported.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....292e64c37c460470dfef33c1e94c45a6