Author: Primessnig, Uwe; Pieske, Burkert M.; Sherif, Mohammad
Title: Increased mortality and worse cardiac outcome of acute myocardial infarction during the early COVIDâ€19 pandemic Cord-id: mhz8ycpk Document date: 2020_12_6
ID: mhz8ycpk
Snippet: AIMS: This study aimed to evaluate the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covidâ€19) outbreak on admissions for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and related mortality, severity of presentation, major cardiac complications and outcome in a tertiaryâ€care university hospital in Berlin, Germany. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a singleâ€centre crossâ€sectional observational study, we included 355 patients with AMI containing STâ€elevation or nonâ€STâ€elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI or NSTEM
Document: AIMS: This study aimed to evaluate the impact of coronavirus disease 2019 (Covidâ€19) outbreak on admissions for acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and related mortality, severity of presentation, major cardiac complications and outcome in a tertiaryâ€care university hospital in Berlin, Germany. METHODS AND RESULTS: In a singleâ€centre crossâ€sectional observational study, we included 355 patients with AMI containing STâ€elevation or nonâ€STâ€elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI or NSTEMI), admitted for emergency cardiac catheterization between January and April 2020 and the equivalent time in 2019. During the early phase of the Covidâ€19 pandemic (eâ€COV) in Berlin (March and April 2020), admissions for AMI halved compared with those in the preâ€Covidâ€19 time (January and February 2020; preâ€COV) and with those in the corresponding months in 2019. However, mortality for AMI increased substantially from 5.2% preâ€COV to 17.7% (P < 0.05) during eâ€COV. Severity of presentation for AMI was more pronounced during eâ€COV [increased levels of cardiac enzymes, reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), an increase in the need of inotropic support by 25% (P < 0.01)], while patients' demographic and angiographic characteristics did not differ between preâ€COV and eâ€COV. Time from symptom onset to first medical contact was prolonged in all AMI during eâ€COV (presentation > 72 h +21% in STEMI, p = 0.04 and presentation > 72 h in NSTEMI +22%, p = 0.02). Door to balloon time was similar in STEMI patients, while time from first medical contact to revascularization was significantly delayed in NSTEMI patients (p = 0.02). Major cardiac complications after AMI occurred significantly more often, and cardiac recovery was worse in eâ€COV than in preâ€COV, demonstrated by a significantly lower LVEF (39 ± 16 vs. 46 ± 16, p < 0.05) at hospital discharge and substantially higher NTproBNP levels. CONCLUSIONS: The Covidâ€19 outbreak affects hospital admissions for acute coronary syndromes. During the first phase of the pandemia, significantly less patients with AMI were admitted, but those admitted presented with a more severe phenotype and had a higher mortality, more complications, and a worse shortâ€term outcome. Therefore, our data indicate that Covidâ€19 had relevant impact on nonâ€infectious disease states, such as acute coronary syndromes.
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