Cerebral Microbleeds and Leukoencephalopathy in Critically Ill Patients With COVID-19

Author:

Agarwal Shashank1,Jain Rajan23,Dogra Siddhant2ORCID,Krieger Penina2,Lewis Ariane13,Nguyen Vinh2ORCID,Melmed Kara13ORCID,Galetta Steven1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology (S.A., A.L., K.M., S.G.), NYU Langone Health, New York, NY.

2. Department of Radiology (R.J., S.D., P.K., V.N.), NYU Langone Health, New York, NY.

3. Department of Neurosurgery (R.J., A.L., K.M.), NYU Langone Health, New York, NY.

Abstract

Background and Purpose: We conducted this study to investigate the prevalence and distribution of cerebral microbleeds and leukoencephalopathy in hospitalized patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) and correlate with clinical, laboratory, and functional outcomes. Methods: We performed a retrospective chart review of 4131 COVID-19 positive adult patients who were admitted to 3 tertiary care hospitals of an academic medical center at the epicenter of the COVID-19 pandemic in New York City from March 1, 2020, to May 10, 2020, to identify patients who had magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. We evaluated the MRIs in detail, and identified a subset of patients with leukoencephalopathy and/or cerebral microbleeds. We compared clinical, laboratory, and functional outcomes for these patients to patients who had a brain MRI that did not show these findings. Results: Of 115 patients who had an MRI of the brain performed, 35 (30.4%) patients had leukoencephalopathy and/or cerebral microbleeds. Patients with leukoencephalopathy and/or cerebral microbleeds had neuroimaging performed later during the hospitalization course (27 versus 10.6 days; P <0.001), were clinically sicker at the time of brain MRI (median GCS 6 versus 14; P <0.001), and had higher peak D-dimer levels (8018±6677 versus 3183±3482; P <0.001), lower nadir platelet count (116.9±62.2 versus 158.3±76.2; P =0.03), higher peak international normalized ratio (2.2 versus 1.57; P <0.001) values when compared with patients who had a brain MRI that did not show these findings. They required longer ventilator support (34.6 versus 9.1 days; P <0.001) and were more likely to have moderate and severe acute respiratory distress syndrome score (88.6% versus 23.8%, P <0.001). These patients had longer hospitalizations (42.1 versus 20.9 days; P <0.001), overall worse functional status on discharge (mRS 5 versus 4; P =0.001), and higher mortality (20% versus 9%; P =0.144). Conclusions: The presence of leukoencephalopathy and/or cerebral microbleeds is associated with a critical illness, increased mortality, and worse functional outcome in patients with COVID-19.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

Reference24 articles.

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