A Multicentric Observational Study to Determine Myocardial Injury in Severe Community-Acquired Pneumonia (sCAP)

Author:

Martin-Loeches Ignacio12ORCID,Maggi Giampaolo13,Diaz Emili4ORCID,Marín-Corral Judith5,Guedea Alfonso6,Restrepo Marcos I.7ORCID,Reyes Luis F.8910ORCID,Rodríguez Alejandro11

Affiliation:

1. Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Multidisciplinary Intensive Care Research Organization (MICRO), St James’s Hospital, D08NYH1 Dublin, Leinster, Ireland

2. Pulmonary Intensive Care Unit, Respiratory Institute, Hospital Clinic of Barcelona, IDIBAPS (Institut d’Investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer), University of Barcelona, CIBERes, 08080 Barcelona, Spain

3. Department of Intensive Care, Emergency Medicine and Anesthesia, Fondazione Policlinico Universitario A. Gemelli IRCCS, 00168 Rome, Italy

4. Critical Care Department—Hospital Parc Tauli/UAB, 08208 Sabadell, Spain

5. Critical Care Department—Hospital del Mar, 08003 Barcelona, Spain

6. Radiology Department—Hospital Universitari de Tarragona Joan XXIII, 43005 Tarragona, Spain

7. Medicine Department—South Texas Veterans Health Care System, University of Texas Health, San Antonio, TX 77030, USA

8. Unisabana Center for Translational Science, School of Medicine, Universidad de La Sabana, Chia 250001, Colombia

9. Clinica Universidad de La Sabana, Chia 140013, Colombia

10. Pandemic Sciences Institute, University of Oxford, Oxford OX1 3BD, UK

11. Critical Care Department—Hospital Universitari de Tarragona Joan XXIII/URV/IISPV/CIBERES, 43005 Tarragona, Spain

Abstract

Background: Severe community-acquired pneumonia (sCAP) is the most frequent admission for acute respiratory failure in intensive care medicine. Observational studies have found a correlation between patients who were admitted with CAP and the development of cardiovascular events. The risk of acute myocardial damage in patients with CAP is particularly high within the first 30 days of hospitalization. Research design and methods: Multicenter prospective cohort analysis conducted in consecutive patients admitted to an ICU with microbiologically confirmed diagnoses of sCAP. The aim was to determine any structural cardiac damage detected by advanced imagining techniques (cardiac MRI) and cardiac biomarkers in patients with sCAP. The patients were stratified, according to their etiology, into pneumococcal or not-pneumococcal sCAP. The primary outcome was cardiac damage at day 5 and 7 of clinical presentation. Results: A total of 23 patients were consecutively and prospectively enrolled for two winter periods. No significant differences were observed between the median troponin when comparing the pneumococcal vs. non-pneumococcal. The incidence of myocardial damage was numerically higher in the pneumococcal subgroup (70% vs. 50%, p = 0.61) on day 5 and on day 7 (53% vs. 40%, p = 0.81) but did not achieve significance. Confirming a correlation between the biomarkers of cell damage and the biomarkers of myocardial damage, only a positive and significant correlation was observed between h-FABP and DNA on day 1 (r = 0.74; p < 0.01) and day 3 (r = 0.83; p < 0.010). Twenty cardiac MRIs were performed on the 23 patients (87%). No presence of fibrosis was observed in any of the studies carried out within the first 15 days of admission. Conclusions: No significant myocardial damage was found in patients with sCAP independent of the bacterial etiology in accordance with biomarker alterations (Troponin and/or h-FABP) or cardiac MRI. Using cardiac MRI, we could not find any presence of myocardial fibrosis within the first 15 days of admission.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical),General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics,Biochemistry,Microbiology

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