| Literature DB >> 36188743 |
Anjani Muthyala1, Sandeep Sasidharan1, Kevin John John2, Amos Lal3, Ajay K Mishra4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular complications have been increasingly recognized in the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) associated coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Cardiac biomarkers are released because of this ongoing cardiovascular injury and can act as surrogate markers to assess the disease severity. AIM: To review the variation and utility of these biomarkers in COVID-19 to ascertain their role in diagnosis, prognosis and clinical outcomes of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: Brain natriuretic peptide; Heart failure; Outcomes; Prognosis; SARS-CoV-2; Troponin
Year: 2022 PMID: 36188743 PMCID: PMC9523328 DOI: 10.5501/wjv.v11.i5.375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Virol ISSN: 2220-3249
Figure 1PRISMA diagram of literature search and selection.
Summary of studies characterizing the role of cardiac troponin
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| Diagnostic and prognostic utility of troponin | ||||
| Lala | Single center, Observational | New York | 2736 | cTn elevated in patients with primary cardiac etiology including MI. Other etiologies included arrythmias, HF, myocarditis and Takotsubu cardiomyopathy |
| Khaloo | Multicenter, Retrospective | Massachusetts | 2450 | |
| Sandoval | Review | Serial cTn measurement aids in risk stratification | ||
| Almeida | Single center, Retrospective | Brazil | 183 | Elevated cTn measured within first 24 h is associated with worst prognosis. Increased need for MV |
| Maino | Single center, Retrospective | Italy | 189 | |
| Arcari | Multicenter, Observational | Italy | 111 | cTn elevation correlated with poor prognosis and need for MV |
| Role in outcome and mortality | ||||
| Scarl | Single center, Retrospective | Ohio | 81 | In patients with pre-existing comorbidities, CTnI elevation is associated with mortality |
| Lala | Single center, Observational | New York | 2,736 | Threefold increase in mortality in patients with cTnI three times the upper limit of normal |
| Mueller | Review | cTn elevation is associated with significant in hospital adverse events | ||
| Henein | Multicenter, Retrospective | International, mainly European | 748 | |
| Kermali | Systematic review | China | 607 | |
| Arcari | Multicenter, Retrospective | Italy | 252 | cTn significantly elevated in patients with pre-existing comorbidities, and is associated with increased mortality |
| Lombardi | Multicenter,Cross sectional | Italy | 614 | Elevation in cTn associated with mortality. 45.3% patients had elevated cTn and correlated with 71% increase in mortality, and a 2-fold increase in additional complications inlcuding sepsis, PE, AKI |
| Salvatici | Single center, Retrospective | Italy | 523 | cTnT and cTnI remain independent predictors of mortality even after adjusting for potential confounders |
| Al Abbasi | Single center, Retrospective | Florida | 257 | Elevated cTnI in the first 24 h of admission had a significantly higher in hospital mortality, with 89.7% negative predictive value |
cTn: Cardiac troponin; cTnT: Troponin T; cTnI: Troponin I; HF: Heart failure; MV: Mechanical ventilation; PE: Pulmonary embolism; AKI: Acute kidney injury.
Summary of studies characterizing the role of natriuretic peptides
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| Diagnostic and prognostic utility of natriuretic peptides | ||||
| Arcari | Multicenter, Observational | Italy | 111 | Positive correlation between the rise in NPs and COVID-19 disease severity. Half of these patients had their NP level above the upper limit of normal |
| Caro-Codón | Population | Spain | 396 | In patients with history of HF, elevation in NT-proBNP above the cut-off for normal suggested development of acute HF |
| Gao | Multicenter, Prospective | China | 402 | This study proposed a triple cut point strategy of NT-proBNP (HF unlikely if NT-proBNP < 300pg/L, grey zone 300-900 pg/L and HF likely if > 900 pg/L) for its role in developing acute HF and in determining prognosis. Thirty day mortality in HF group was 40.8%. |
| Sorrentino | Meta-analysis of 13 observational studies | 2248 | Natriuretic peptides have significant prognostic importance in predicting severity of COVID-19 | |
| Yoo | Single center, Retrospective cohort | New York | 679 | In patients without a history of HF, elevated admission NT-proBNP correlated with fewer hospital free, ICU free and ventilator free days compared to those with low NT-proBNP levels |
| Alvarez-Garcia | Single center, Retrospective | New York | 6439 | No difference identified in the level of NP and COVID-19 disease severity |
| Dawson | Meta-analysis | China | 12 studies included | |
| Abdeen | Single center, Retrospective | New Jersey | 230 | |
| Role in outcome and mortality | ||||
| Gao | Single center, Retrospective | China | 102 | Natriuretic peptides independently associated with in-hospital mortality in severe COVID-19 patients. The cut off value predicting in hospital death was 88.64 pg/mL with a 100% sensitivity and 66.7% specificity. |
| Caro-Codón | Population | Spain | 396 | Elevations in NP correlated with in-hospital mortality, even after adjusting for relevant confounders |
| Calvo-Fernández A | Single center, Retrospective | Spain | 872 | Natriuretic peptide elevation is independently related to death or mechanical ventilation in COVID-19 patients |
| Selcuk | Single center, Retrospective | Istanbul | 137 | Among patients who did not have a baseline diagnosis of HF, NPs were independent predictors of mortality. This study used a cut off threshold of 260pg/ml predicting an in-hospital mortality with 82% sensitivity and 93% specificity |
| Iorio | Multicenter, Retrospective observational | Italy | 341 | The level of NP elevation correlated with mortality. Cut off threshold used in this study is 2598 pg/L predicting a 30-d mortality with 91.7% sensitivity and an 80% specificity |
| Belarte-Tornero | Single center, Retrospective | Spain | 129 | |
| Dalia | Systematic review | India | 5967 | Patients with fulminant COVID-19 and elevated NPs had an eight-fold increased risk of acute cardiac injury and death when compared to their counterparts |
| Pranata | Meta analysis | 967 | In patients with HF, natriuretic peptide elevation is associated with disease progression and mortality. This effect was seen even after adjustment for troponin and CKMB | |
| Iorio | Multicenter, Retrospective observational | Italy | 341 | The combined effect of cTn and NT-proBNP was studied in COVID-19 patients. Irrespective of prior HF history, increased mortality was seen in patients with both biomarker elevation. In patients with only one biomarker elevation, case fatality higher in patients with NP elevation |
| Stefanini | Single center, Retrospective | Italy | 397 | |
NP: Natriuretic peptide; NT-proBNP: N terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide; HF: Heart failure; cTn: Cardiac troponin; COVID-19: Corona virus disease 2019.
Figure 2Studies showing elevation of cardiac bioenzymes across different etiologies of cardiovascular dysfunction.
Summary of studies characterizing the role of novel biomarkers in prognosis and outcomes in COVID-19
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| Presepsin | Favaloro | Presepsin elevation is a reliable biomarker in COVID-19 |
| Park | A four-to-five-fold increase in presepsin correlates with disease severity in COVID-19 | |
| Lippi | ||
| Koyjit | ||
| Fukada | Presepsin is elevated in severe cases of SARS-CoV-2 associated respiratory complications | |
| Park | Presepsin level at 717pg/ml is a significant predictor of 30-day mortality | |
| Dell’Aquila | A threefold rise in presepsin has been identified as a very specific indicator of 30-day mortality | |
| Lippi | ||
| Soluble ST2 (sST2) | Omland | Robust association between baseline sST2 level and disease severity along with poor outcome |
| Huang | Baseline sST2 is associated with a worse prognosis | |
| Ragusa | Circulating level of sST2 can be used as a discharge prognosticator | |
| Galectin-3 | Caniglia | Gal-3 is considerably higher in bronchoalveolar immune cells in patients with severe COVID-19 disease |
| Portacci | Higher galectin-3 is associated with worse outcomes and shorter survival | |
| Copeptin | Gregoriano | Serum copeptin level above 20 Pmol/L had sensitivity of > 88% to predict severe COVID-19 |
| Hammad | Serum copeptin level above 18.5 Pmol/L had sensitivity of > 93% and specificity of 100% to predict severe COVID-19 | |
| GDF 15 | Apfel | Higher levels of GDF-15 correlated with severity of COVID-19 |
Gal-3: Galectin-3; GDF-15: Growth differentiation factor 15; sST2: Soluble ST2.