Impact of COVID-19 in patients hospitalized with stress cardiomyopathy: A nationwide analysis

Adrija Hajra, Montefiore Medical Center, New York
Aaqib Malik, Westchester Medical Center, New York
Dhrubajyoti Bandyopadhyay, Westchester Medical Center, New York
Akshay Goel, Westchester Medical Center, New York
Ameesh Isath, Westchester Medical Center, New York
Rahul Gupta, Lehigh Valley Heart Institute, United States of America
Suraj Krishnan, Jacobi Medical Center/Albert Einstein, United States of America
Devesh Rai, Sands-Constellation Heart Institute, United States of America
Chayakrit Krittanawong, NYU Langone Health, United States of America
Salim S. Virani, Michael E. DeBakey Veterans Affairs Medical Center, United States of America

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Abstract

Stress cardiomyopathy was noted to occur at a higher incidence during coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This database analysis has been done to compare the in-hospital outcomes in patients with stress cardiomyopathy and concurrent COVID-19 infection with those without COVID-19 infection. The National Inpatient Sample database for the year 2020 was queried to identify all admissions diagnosed with stress cardiomyopathy. These patients were then stratified based on whether they had concomitant COVID-19 infection or not. A 1:1 propensity score matching was performed. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was done to identify predictors of mortality. We identified 41,290 hospitalizations for stress cardiomyopathy, including 1665 patients with concurrent diagnosis of COVID-19. The female preponderance was significantly lower in patients with stress cardiomyopathy and COVID-19. Patients with concomitant COVID-19 were more likely to be African American, diabetic and have chronic kidney disease. After propensity matching, the incidence of complications, including acute kidney injury (AKI), AKI requiring dialysis, coagulopathy, sepsis, cardiogenic shock, cases with prolonged intubation of >24 h, requirement of vasopressor and inpatient mortality, were noted to be significantly higher in patients with COVID-19. Concomitant COVID-19 infection was independently associated with worse outcomes and increased mortality in patients hospitalized with stress cardiomyopathy.