Uneventful COVID-19 Infection and Vaccination in a Cohort of Patients with Prior Myocarditis.
Anna BaritussioAndrea Silvio GiordaniCristina BassoCristina VicenzettoGiulia LorenzoniMatteo GasparinSabino IlicetoBruno ScarpaDario GregoriRenzo MarcolongoAlida Linda Patrizia CaforioPublished in: Vaccines (2023)
Myocarditis has in rare cases been associated with COVID-19 infection and has emerged as a possible rare side effect of vaccination with anti-COVID-19 messenger RNA vaccines. However, little is known about possible COVID-19 infection- and/or vaccination-related myocarditis relapse in patients with previous clinically suspected or biopsy-proven myocarditis. Myocarditis may relapse, particularly in females with immune-mediated/autoimmune features and a predisposing immunogenetic background. We aimed to assess the prevalence of myocarditis relapse during the COVID-19 outbreak and following COVID-19 vaccination in a cohort of patients with prior myocarditis. We included in the analysis myocarditis patients on active follow-up, for whom COVID-19 infection and vaccination statuses were known, and collected data on clinical, laboratory and echocardiographic findings, and myocarditis relapse. We enrolled 409 patients, of whom 114 (28%) reported COVID-19 infection and 347 (85%) completed the vaccination scheme. Only one patient, having COVID-19 infection before the vaccination campaign started, was admitted to hospital because of pneumonia; the remaining patients had an uneventful COVID-19 infection course, with only mild symptoms. No myocarditis relapse was recorded following COVID-19 infection or vaccination. Moreover, the frequency of new myocarditis cases following the COVID-19 outbreak was not different compared to the three-year period preceding the COVID-19 era. In conclusion, in our cohort of patients with prior myocarditis, both COVID-19 infection and vaccination were uneventful.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- sars cov
- coronavirus disease
- chronic kidney disease
- peritoneal dialysis
- healthcare
- emergency department
- free survival
- multiple sclerosis
- intensive care unit
- pulmonary hypertension
- patient reported outcomes
- machine learning
- electronic health record
- atrial fibrillation
- big data
- fine needle aspiration
- catheter ablation