Published 2021
| Version v1
Publication
The prognostic value of serial troponin measurements in patients admitted for COVID-19
Creators
- Nuzzi, Vincenzo
- Merlo, Marco
- Specchia, Claudia
- Lombardi, Carlo Mario
- Carubelli, Valentina
- Iorio, Annamaria
- Inciardi, Riccardo Maria
- Bellasi, Antonio
- Canale, Claudia
- Camporotondo, Rita
- Catagnano, Francesco
- Dalla Vecchia, Laura Adelaide
- Giovinazzo, Stefano
- Maccagni, Gloria
- Mapelli, Massimo
- Margonato, Davide
- Monzo, Luca
- Oriecuia, Chiara
- Peveri, Giulia
- Pozzi, Andrea
- Provenzale, Giovanni
- Sarullo, Filippo
- Tomasoni, Daniela
- Ameri, Pietro
- Gnecchi, Massimiliano
- Leonardi, Sergio
- Agostoni, Piergiuseppe
- Carugo, Stefano
- Danzi, Gian Battista
- Guazzi, Marco
- La Rovere, Maria Teresa
- Mortara, Andrea
- Piepoli, Massimo
- Porto, Italo
- Volterrani, Maurizio
- Senni, Michele
- Metra, Marco
- Sinagra, Gianfranco
Contributors
Others:
- Nuzzi, Vincenzo
- Merlo, Marco
- Specchia, Claudia
- Lombardi, Carlo Mario
- Carubelli, Valentina
- Iorio, Annamaria
- Inciardi, Riccardo Maria
- Bellasi, Antonio
- Canale, Claudia
- Camporotondo, Rita
- Catagnano, Francesco
- Dalla Vecchia, Laura Adelaide
- Giovinazzo, Stefano
- Maccagni, Gloria
- Mapelli, Massimo
- Margonato, Davide
- Monzo, Luca
- Oriecuia, Chiara
- Peveri, Giulia
- Pozzi, Andrea
- Provenzale, Giovanni
- Sarullo, Filippo
- Tomasoni, Daniela
- Ameri, Pietro
- Gnecchi, Massimiliano
- Leonardi, Sergio
- Agostoni, Piergiuseppe
- Carugo, Stefano
- Danzi, Gian Battista
- Guazzi, Marco
- La Rovere, Maria Teresa
- Mortara, Andrea
- Piepoli, Massimo
- Porto, Italo
- Volterrani, Maurizio
- Senni, Michele
- Metra, Marco
- Sinagra, Gianfranco
Description
Aims: Myocardial injury (MI) in coronavirus disease-19 (COVID-19) is quite prevalent at admission and affects prognosis. Little is known about troponin trajectories and their prognostic role. We aimed to describe the early in-hospital evolution of MI and its prognostic impact.
Methods and results: We performed an analysis from an Italian multicentre study enrolling COVID-19 patients, hospitalized from 1 March to 9 April 2020. MI was defined as increased troponin level. The first troponin was tested within 24 h from admission, the second one between 24 and 48 h. Elevated troponin was defined as values above the 99th percentile of normal values. Patients were divided in four groups: normal, normal then elevated, elevated then normal, and elevated. The outcome was in-hospital death. The study population included 197 patients; 41% had normal troponin at both evaluations, 44% had elevated troponin at both assessments, 8% had normal then elevated troponin, and 7% had elevated then normal troponin. During hospitalization, 49 (25%) patients died. Patients with incident MI, with persistent MI, and with MI only at admission had a higher risk of death compared with those with normal troponin at both evaluations (P < 0.001). At multivariable analysis, patients with normal troponin at admission and MI injury on Day 2 had the highest mortality risk (hazard ratio 3.78, 95% confidence interval 1.10-13.09, P = 0.035).
Conclusions: In patients admitted for COVID-19, re-test MI on Day 2 provides a prognostic value. A non-negligible proportion of patients with incident MI on Day 2 is identified at high risk of death only by the second measurement
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- http://hdl.handle.net/11567/1096455
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1096455
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE