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Myocardial Work in Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19:Relation to Biomarkers, COVID-19 Severity, and All-Cause Mortality
- Source :
- Olsen , F J , Lassen , M C H , Skaarup , K G , Christensen , J , Davidovski , F S , Alhakak , A S , Sengeløv , M , Nielsen , A B , Johansen , N D , Graff , C , Bundgaard , H , Hassager , C , Jabbari , R , Carlsen , J , Kirk , O , Lindholm , M G , Wiese , L , Kristiansen , O P , Nielsen , O W , Lindegaard , B , Tønder , N , Ulrik , C S , Lamberts , M , Sivapalan , P , Gislason , G , Iversen , K , Jensen , J U S , Schou , M , Svendsen , J H , Smiseth , O A , Remme , E W & Biering-Sørensen , T 2022 , ' Myocardial Work in Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19 : Relation to Biomarkers, COVID-19 Severity, and All-Cause Mortality ' , Journal of the American Heart Association , vol. 11 , no. 19 , e026571 .
- Publication Year :
- 2022
-
Abstract
- BACKGROUND: COVID-19 infection has been hypothesized to affect left ventricular function; however, the underlying mechanisms and the association to clinical outcome are not understood. The global work index (GWI) is a novel echocardiographic measure of systolic function that may offer insights on cardiac dysfunction in COVID-19. We hypothesized that GWI was associated with disease severity and all-cause death in patients with COVID-19. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a multicenter study of patients admitted with COVID-19 (n=305), 249 underwent pressure-strain loop analyses to quantify GWI at a median time of 4 days after admission. We examined the association of GWI to cardiac biomarkers (troponin and NT-proBNP [N-terminal pro-B-type natriuretic peptide]), disease severity (oxygen requirement and CRP [C-reactive protein]), and all-cause death. Patients with elevated troponin (n=71) exhibited significantly reduced GWI (1508 versus 1707 mm Hg%; P=0.018). A curvilinear association to NT-proBNP was observed, with increasing NT-proBNP once GWI decreased below 1446 mm Hg%. Moreover, GWI was significantly associated with a higher oxygen requirement (relative increase of 6% per 100– mm Hg% decrease). No association was observed with CRP. Of the 249 patients, 37 died during follow-up (median, 58 days). In multivariable Cox regression, GWI was associated with all-cause death (hazard ratio, 1.08 [95% CI, 1.01–1.15], per 100– mm Hg% decrease), but did not increase C-statistics when added to clinical parameters. CONCLUSIONS: In patients admitted with COVID-19, our findings indicate that NT-proBNP and troponin may be associated with lower GWI, whereas CRP is not. GWI was independently associated with all-cause death, but did not provide prognostic information beyond readily available clinical parameters. REGISTRATION: URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT04377035.
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Olsen , F J , Lassen , M C H , Skaarup , K G , Christensen , J , Davidovski , F S , Alhakak , A S , Sengeløv , M , Nielsen , A B , Johansen , N D , Graff , C , Bundgaard , H , Hassager , C , Jabbari , R , Carlsen , J , Kirk , O , Lindholm , M G , Wiese , L , Kristiansen , O P , Nielsen , O W , Lindegaard , B , Tønder , N , Ulrik , C S , Lamberts , M , Sivapalan , P , Gislason , G , Iversen , K , Jensen , J U S , Schou , M , Svendsen , J H , Smiseth , O A , Remme , E W & Biering-Sørensen , T 2022 , ' Myocardial Work in Patients Hospitalized With COVID-19 : Relation to Biomarkers, COVID-19 Severity, and All-Cause Mortality ' , Journal of the American Heart Association , vol. 11 , no. 19 , e026571 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1382510623
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource