Direct and indirect effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on patients with cardiomyopathy

Author:

Hammersley Daniel JORCID,Buchan Rachel J,Lota Amrit S,Mach Lukas,Jones Richard E,Halliday Brian P,Tayal Upasana,Meena Devendra,Dehghan Abbas,Tzoulaki Ioanna,Baksi A John,Pantazis Antonis,Roberts Angharad M,Prasad Sanjay K,Ware James S

Abstract

Objectives(1) To evaluate the prevalence and hospitalisation rate of COVID-19 infections among patients with dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in the Royal Brompton and Harefield Hospital Cardiovascular Research Centre (RBHH CRC) Biobank. (2) To evaluate the indirect impact of the pandemic on patients with cardiomyopathy through the Heart Hive COVID-19 study. (3) To assess the impact of the pandemic on national cardiomyopathy-related hospital admissions.Methods(1) 1236 patients (703 DCM, 533 HCM) in the RBHH CRC Biobank were assessed for COVID-19 infections and hospitalisations; (2) 207 subjects (131 cardiomyopathy, 76 without heart disease) in the Heart Hive COVID-19 study completed online surveys evaluating physical health, psychological well-being, and behavioural adaptations during the pandemic and (3) 11 447 cardiomyopathy-related hospital admissions across National Health Service (NHS) England were studied from NHS Digital Hospital Episode Statistics over 2019–2020.ResultsA comparable proportion of patients with cardiomyopathy in the RBHH CRC Biobank had tested positive for COVID-19 compared with the UK population (1.1% vs 1.6%, p=0.14), but a higher proportion of those infected were hospitalised (53.8% vs 16.5%, p=0.002). In the Heart Hive COVID-19 study, more patients with cardiomyopathy felt their physical health had deteriorated due to the pandemic than subjects without heart disease (32.3% vs 13.2%, p=0.004) despite only 4.6% of the cardiomyopathy cohort reporting COVID-19 symptoms. A 17.9% year-on-year reduction in national cardiomyopathy-related hospital admissions was observed in 2020.ConclusionPatients with cardiomyopathy had similar reported rates of testing positive for COVID-19 to the background population, but those with test-proven infection were hospitalised more frequently. Deterioration in physical health amongst patients could not be explained by COVID-19 symptoms, inferring a significant contribution of the indirect consequences of the pandemic.Trial registration numberNCT04468256

Funder

Medical Research Council (UK), British Heart Foundation

Cardiomyopathy UK

Wellcome

Sam’s Rainbow Foundation

National Institute for Health Research

Royal Brompton & Harefield Cardiovascular Biomedical Research Unit

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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