Myocarditis Is Rare in COVID-19 Autopsies: Cardiovascular Findings Across 277 Postmortem Examinations
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-23-2020
Publication Title
Cardiovascular Pathology
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic, the result of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS)-CoV-2, is a major cause of worldwide mortality with a significant cardiovascular component. While a number of different cardiovascular histopathologies have been reported at postmortem examination, their incidence is unknown, due to limited numbers of cases in any given study. A literature review was performed identifying 277 autopsied hearts across 22 separate publications of COVID-19 positive patients. The median age of the autopsy cohort was 75 and 97.6% had one or more comorbidities. Initial review of the data indicate that myocarditis was present in 20 hearts (7.2%); however, closer examination of additional reported information revealed that most cases were likely not functionally significant and the true prevalence of myocarditis is likely much lower ( < 2%). At least one acute, potentially COVID-19-related cardiovascular histopathologic finding, such as macro or microvascular thrombi, inflammation, or intraluminal megakaryocytes, was reported in 47.8% of cases. Significant differences in reporting of histopathologic findings occurred between studies indicating strong biases in observations and the need for more consistency in reporting. In conclusion, across 277 cases, COVID-19-related cardiac histopathological findings, are common, while myocarditis is rare.
PubMed ID
33132119
Volume
50
Recommended Citation
Halushka, Marc K. and Vander Heide, Richard S., "Myocarditis Is Rare in COVID-19 Autopsies: Cardiovascular Findings Across 277 Postmortem Examinations" (2020). School of Medicine Faculty Publications. 2161.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/som_facpubs/2161
10.1016/j.carpath.2020.107300