Heart Involvement in Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome, Associated With COVID-19 in Children: The Retrospective Multicenter Cohort Data
Mikhail M. Kostik, L.V. Bregel, Ilia S. Avrusin, Olesya S. Efremova, Konstantin E. Belozerov, Е А Дондурей, Tatiana Kornishina, E.A. Isupova, Н. Н. Абрамова, Eugeniy Yu Felker, V.V. Masalova, Andrey Vyacheslavovich Santimov, Yuri A. Kozlov, Alexander O. Barakin, L. S. Snegireva, Julia Konstantinova, А. А. Vilnits, М. К. Бехтерева, V.M. Argunova, A.E. Matyunova, P.A. Sleptsova, T.E. Burtseva, В. В. Шпрах, T. V. Boyko, Olga Kalashnikova, Vyacheslav Chasnyk
Abstract
Objectives Heart involvement in multisystem inflammatory syndrome associated with COVID-19 in children (MIS-C) is a new challenging problem, requiring fast and reliable diagnostics and appropriate treatment. The aim of this study is to describe heart involvement in patients with MIS-C. Study Design In this retrospective, multicenter cohort study, data of 122 patients were included. All patients met WHO and CDC criteria of MIS-C. Results Various types of heart involvement in MIS-C patients were observed. Patients with solely coronary artery lesions (CAL, n = 10, 8.2%) had typical features of Kawasaki disease: younger age, thrombocytosis and normal ferritin level, without giant CA aneurysms, thrombosis, myocardial infarction, shock, and ICU admission. Patients with solely myocardial involvement (MI, n = 30, 24.6%) had an older onset age, elevated ferritin, LDH, the highest D-dimer, H score, and thrombocytopenia level. The following clinical signs were associated with MI: gastrointestinal and central nervous system disorder, sore throat, swelling face, splenomegaly, shock, and treatment in the intensive care unit required. Patients with a combination of CAL and MI ( n = 10, 8.2%) had symptoms similar to patients with solely MI, except for impressive thrombocytopenia. Shock and ICU admission were found in 34.7% of patients without heart involvement ( n = 72, 59%). One major criterion [troponin > 32 pg/ml (52 points)] or at least two minor criteria [face swelling (32 points) and D-Dimer > 1,300 ng/ml (29 points)] were associated with MI (>32 points) with a sensitivity of 67.5% and a specificity of 88.9%. Conclusion The above-suggested criteria can be added to routine diagnostic procedures to confirm MI in MIS-C patients.