COVID-19–Associated cardiac pathology at the postmortem evaluation: a collaborative systematic review
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Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Background: Many postmortem studies address the cardiovascular effects of COVID-19 and provide valuable information, but are limited by their small sample size. Objectives: The aim of this systematic review is to better understand the various aspects of the cardiovascular complications of COVID-19 by pooling data from a large number of autopsy studies. Data sources: We searched the online databases Ovid EBM Reviews, Ovid Embase, Ovid Medline, Scopus, and Web of Science for concepts of autopsy or histopathology combined with COVID-19, published between database inception and February 2021. We also searched for unpublished manuscripts using the medRxiv services operated by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory. Study eligibility criteria: Articles were considered eligible for inclusion if they reported human postmortem cardiovascular findings among individuals with a confirmed SARS coronavirus type 2 (CoV-2) infection. Participants: Confirmed COVID-19 patients with post-mortem cardiovascular findings. Interventions: None. Methods: Studies were individually assessed for risk of selection, detection, and reporting biases. The median prevalence of different autopsy findings with associated interquartile ranges (IQRs). Results: This review cohort contained 50 studies including 548 hearts. The median age of the deceased was 69 years. The most prevalent acute cardiovascular findings were myocardial necrosis (median: 100.0%; IQR, 20%–100%; number of studies = 9; number of patients = 64) and myocardial oedema (median: 55.5%; IQR, 19.5%–92.5%; number of studies = 4; number of patients = 46). The median reported prevalence of extensive, focal active, and multifocal myocarditis were all 0.0%. The most prevalent chronic changes were myocyte hypertrophy (median: 69.0%; IQR, 46.8%–92.1%) and fibrosis (median: 35.0%; IQR, 35.0%–90.5%). SARS-CoV-2 was detected in the myocardium with median prevalence of 60.8% (IQR 40.4-95.6%). Conclusions: Our systematic review confirmed the high prevalence of acute and chronic cardiac pathologies in COVID-19 and SARS-CoV-2 cardiac tropism, as well as the low prevalence of myocarditis in COVID-19. © 2022 European Society of Clinical Microbiology and Infectious Diseases
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Cardiac pathology, Covid-19, Myocarditis, Postmortem, Sars-cov-2, Systematic review, Amyloid p component, Transthyretin, Troponin, Acute heart infarction, Adult, Aged, Autopsy, Cardiovascular disease, Cardiovascular mortality, Cause of death, Chronic kidney failure, Chronic obstructive lung disease, Comorbidity, Controlled study, Coronary artery atherosclerosis, Coronary artery disease, Coronavirus disease 2019, Dementia, Diabetes mellitus, Disease association, Embase, Female, Heart amyloidosis, Heart edema, Heart hypertrophy, Heart infarction, Heart muscle fibrosis, Heart muscle necrosis, Heart weight, Histopathology, Human, Hypertension, Immunohistochemistry, In situ hybridization, Intracardiac thrombosis, Lung embolism, Male, Medline, Multifocal myocarditis, Obesity, Pericarditis, Prevalence, Review, Scopus, Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2, Sleep disordered breathing, Small vessel vasculitis, Vascular endothelial cell, Virus replication, Web of science