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Acute Cardiovascular Manifestations in 286 Children With Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome Associated With COVID-19 Infection in Europe
Author(s) -
Israel Valverde,
Yogen Singh,
Joan Sánchez-de-Toledo,
Paraskevi Theocharis,
Ashish Chikermane,
Sylvie Di Filippo,
Beata Kucińska,
Savina Mannarino,
Amalia TamarizMartel,
Federico GutiérrezLarraya,
Giridhar Soda,
Kristof Vandekerckhove,
Francisco Gonzalez-Barlatay,
Colin J. McMahon,
Simona Marcora,
Carlo Pace Napoleone,
Phuoc Duong,
Giulia Tuo,
Antigoni Deri,
Gauri Nepali,
Maria Ilina,
Paolo Ciliberti,
Owen Miller,
Xavier Iriart,
Jelena Hubrechts,
Irene M. Kuipers,
Ana R. Sousa,
Andrea Donti,
Abigail Sharpe,
Zdenka Reinhardt,
Francesca Cairello,
Daniël De Wolf,
Marisa Vieira,
Cecilia Lazea,
Ferrán Gran,
Constancio Medrano,
Almudena Ortiz-Garrido,
Vladislav Vukomanović,
Bernadette Brent,
Ornella Milanesi,
Wendy Dewals,
Begoña Manso,
Emanuela Valsangiacomo-Buchel,
Andreia Francisco,
Marie-Christine Seghaye,
Isabelle Loeckx,
Moisés RodríguezGonzález,
Susana Maria Rey-García,
Victoria C. Ziesenitz,
Giulia Bordin,
Gabriela Doroş,
Gernot Grangl,
Shalan Fadl,
Karl Viktor Perminow,
Fernándo Centeno Malfaz,
Fátima Cunha Ferreira Pinto,
Jussi Niemelä,
Hari Krishnan Kanthimathinathan,
Paula C. Randanne,
Cezary Niszczota,
Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti,
Inés Leóz Gordillo,
Madhu Obeyasekhara,
Catherine Armstrong,
Karina Butler,
Matteo Ciuffreda,
Anna Maria Villar,
Naga Pappula,
Roberta Caorsi,
Davinder Singh,
Saravanan Durairaj,
Karen McLeod,
Giulio Calcagni,
Youssef Quizad,
Marc Gewillig,
Taco W. Kuijpers,
Rita Ataide,
Marianna Fabi,
Tara Bharucha,
Abbas Khushnood,
Silvia Alessandra Magrass,
James Wong,
Daniela Iacob,
Joan Balcells,
Nuria Gil-Villanueva,
Victorio Cuenca-Peiró,
Ivana Cerovi,
Avishay Sarfatt,
Mahmoud Zaqout,
Elia Sánchez-Valderrabanos,
Janet Kelly-Geyer,
Diogo Faim,
Nathalie Cajgfinger,
Françoise Mascart,
Fernando Rueda-Núñez,
Matthias Gorenflo,
Alessandra Grison,
D. Mihailov,
Martin Köestenberger,
Carlos Losilla Alcalde,
Conceição Trigo,
Anita Arola,
Katarina Hanséus
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
circulation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.795
H-Index - 607
eISSN - 1524-4539
pISSN - 0009-7322
DOI - 10.1161/circulationaha.120.050065
Subject(s) - medicine , interquartile range , procalcitonin , ejection fraction , pericardial effusion , ferritin , acute coronary syndrome , natriuretic peptide , myocarditis , kawasaki disease , cardiology , sepsis , pediatrics , heart failure , artery , myocardial infarction
Background: The aim of the study was to document cardiovascular clinical findings, cardiac imaging, and laboratory markers in children presenting with the novel multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) infection. Methods: This real-time internet-based survey has been endorsed by the Association for European Paediatric and Congenital Cardiologists Working Groups for Cardiac Imaging and Cardiovascular Intensive Care. Children 0 to 18 years of age admitted to a hospital between February 1 and June 6, 2020, with a diagnosis of an inflammatory syndrome and acute cardiovascular complications were included. Results: A total of 286 children from 55 centers in 17 European countries were included. The median age was 8.4 years (interquartile range, 3.8–12.4 years) and 67% were boys. The most common cardiovascular complications were shock, cardiac arrhythmias, pericardial effusion, and coronary artery dilatation. Reduced left ventricular ejection fraction was present in over half of the patients, and a vast majority of children had raised cardiac troponin when checked. The biochemical markers of inflammation were raised in most patients on admission: elevated C-reactive protein, serum ferritin, procalcitonin, N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide, interleukin-6 level, and D-dimers. There was a statistically significant correlation between degree of elevation in cardiac and biochemical parameters and the need for intensive care support (P <0.05). Polymerase chain reaction for severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 was positive in 33.6%, whereas immunoglobulin M and immunoglobulin G antibodies were positive in 15.7% cases and immunoglobulin G in 43.6% cases, respectively, when checked. One child in the study cohort died.Conclusions: Cardiac involvement is common in children with multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with the Covid-19 pandemic. The majority of children have significantly raised levels of N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide, ferritin, D-dimers, and cardiac troponin in addition to high C-reactive protein and procalcitonin levels. In comparison with adults with COVID-19, mortality in children with multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with COVID-19 is uncommon despite multisystem involvement, very elevated inflammatory markers, and the need for intensive care support.

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