Author: Aikawa, Tadao; Takagi, Hisato; Ishikawa, Kiyotake; Kuno, Toshiki
Title: Myocardial injury characterized by elevated cardiac troponin and inâ€hospital mortality of COVIDâ€19: an insight from a metaâ€analysis Cord-id: jxc065co Document date: 2020_6_2
ID: jxc065co
Snippet: Elevation of highâ€sensitivity cardiac troponin (hsâ€cTn) is a surrogate of myocardial injury, which appears to be a common complication of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). In this study, a metaâ€analysis was performed to clarify the association between myocardial injury assessed by hsâ€cTn levels and inâ€hospital mortality in patients with COVIDâ€19. All existing studies on myocardial injury in patients with COVIDâ€19 were retrieved from PubMed and EMBASE through April 13, 2020. In
Document: Elevation of highâ€sensitivity cardiac troponin (hsâ€cTn) is a surrogate of myocardial injury, which appears to be a common complication of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). In this study, a metaâ€analysis was performed to clarify the association between myocardial injury assessed by hsâ€cTn levels and inâ€hospital mortality in patients with COVIDâ€19. All existing studies on myocardial injury in patients with COVIDâ€19 were retrieved from PubMed and EMBASE through April 13, 2020. In cases where overlap of the study population or enrollment period was found in articles published from the same hospitals, the article with the largest number of patients was only included in the analysis. The pooled odds ratio was calculated using inverse variance weighted randomâ€effects models. Six observational studies which included a total of 1,231 patients met the search criteria. The percentage of patients with hsâ€cTn levels varied across the studies (13â€41%). Elevated hsâ€cTn levels were significantly associated with an increase in inâ€hospital mortality (pooled odds ratio, 22.7; 95% confidence interval, 13.6â€38.1; P<0.001) with a moderate heterogeneity (I (2)=28%), suggesting that elevated hsâ€cTn levels might be used as a reliable marker of disease severity early in the course of COVIDâ€19. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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