Back to Search Start Over

Clinico-histopathologic and single-nuclei RNA-sequencing insights into cardiac injury and microthrombi in critical COVID-19

Authors :
Michael I. Brener
Michelle L. Hulke
Nobuaki Fukuma
Stephanie Golob
Robert S. Zilinyi
Zhipeng Zhou
Christos Tzimas
Ilaria Russo
Claire McGroder
Ryan D. Pfeiffer
Alexander Chong
Geping Zhang
Daniel Burkhoff
Martin B. Leon
Mathew S. Maurer
Jeffrey W. Moses
Anne-Catrin Uhlemann
Hanina Hibshoosh
Nir Uriel
Matthias J. Szabolcs
Björn Redfors
Charles C. Marboe
Matthew R. Baldwin
Nathan R. Tucker
Emily J. Tsai
Source :
JCI Insight, Vol 7, Iss 2 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical investigation, 2022.

Abstract

Acute cardiac injury is prevalent in critical COVID-19 and associated with increased mortality. Its etiology remains debated, as initially presumed causes — myocarditis and cardiac necrosis — have proved uncommon. To elucidate the pathophysiology of COVID-19–associated cardiac injury, we conducted a prospective study of the first 69 consecutive COVID-19 decedents at CUIMC in New York City. Of 6 acute cardiac histopathologic features, presence of microthrombi was the most commonly detected among our cohort. We tested associations of cardiac microthrombi with biomarkers of inflammation, cardiac injury, and fibrinolysis and with in-hospital antiplatelet therapy, therapeutic anticoagulation, and corticosteroid treatment, while adjusting for multiple clinical factors, including COVID-19 therapies. Higher peak erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein were independently associated with increased odds of microthrombi, supporting an immunothrombotic etiology. Using single-nuclei RNA-sequencing analysis on 3 patients with and 4 patients without cardiac microthrombi, we discovered an enrichment of prothrombotic/antifibrinolytic, extracellular matrix remodeling, and immune-potentiating signaling among cardiac fibroblasts in microthrombi-positive, relative to microthrombi-negative, COVID-19 hearts. Non–COVID-19, nonfailing hearts were used as reference controls. Our study identifies a specific transcriptomic signature in cardiac fibroblasts as a salient feature of microthrombi-positive COVID-19 hearts. Our findings warrant further mechanistic study as cardiac fibroblasts may represent a potential therapeutic target for COVID-19–associated cardiac microthrombi.

Subjects

Subjects :
COVID-19
Cardiology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
7
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JCI Insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.2de2e76911bc473598fb90fee54b07f0
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.154633