1. Clinically Suspected Myocarditis Temporally Related to COVID-19 Vaccination in Adolescents and Young Adults: Suspected Myocarditis After COVID-19 Vaccination
- Author
-
Dongngan T. Truong, Audrey Dionne, Juan Carlos Muniz, Kimberly E. McHugh, Michael A. Portman, Linda M. Lambert, Deepika Thacker, Matthew D. Elias, Jennifer S. Li, Olga H. Toro-Salazar, Brett R. Anderson, Andrew M. Atz, C. Monique Bohun, M. Jay Campbell, Maryanne Chrisant, Laura D’Addese, Kirsten B. Dummer, Daniel Forsha, Lowell H. Frank, Olivia H. Frosch, Sarah K. Gelehrter, Therese M. Giglia, Camden Hebson, Supriya S. Jain, Pace Johnston, Anita Krishnan, Kristin C. Lombardi, Brian W. McCrindle, Elizabeth C. Mitchell, Koichi Miyata, Trent Mizzi, Robert M. Parker, Jyoti K. Patel, Christina Ronai, Arash A. Sabati, Jenna Schauer, S. Kristen Sexson Tejtel, J. Ryan Shea, Lara S. Shekerdemian, Shubhika Srivastava, Jodie K. Votava-Smith, Sarah White, and Jane W. Newburger
- Subjects
Male ,COVID-19 Vaccines ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,COVID-19 ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,Electrocardiography ,Myocarditis ,Young Adult ,Physiology (medical) ,Humans ,Female ,Child ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Retrospective Studies - Abstract
Background: Understanding the clinical course and short-term outcomes of suspected myocarditis after the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) vaccination has important public health implications in the decision to vaccinate youth. Methods: We retrospectively collected data on patients Results: We report on 139 adolescents and young adults with 140 episodes of suspected myocarditis (49 confirmed, 91 probable) at 26 centers. Most patients were male (n=126, 90.6%) and White (n=92, 66.2%); 29 (20.9%) were Hispanic; and the median age was 15.8 years (range, 12.1–20.3; interquartile range [IQR], 14.5–17.0). Suspected myocarditis occurred in 136 patients (97.8%) after the mRNA vaccine, with 131 (94.2%) after the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine; 128 (91.4%) occurred after the second dose. Symptoms started at a median of 2 days (range, 0–22; IQR, 1–3) after vaccination. The most common symptom was chest pain (99.3%). Patients were treated with nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (81.3%), intravenous immunoglobulin (21.6%), glucocorticoids (21.6%), colchicine (7.9%), or no anti-inflammatory therapies (8.6%). Twenty-six patients (18.7%) were in the intensive care unit, 2 were treated with inotropic/vasoactive support, and none required extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or died. Median hospital stay was 2 days (range, 0–10; IQR, 2–3). All patients had elevated troponin I (n=111, 8.12 ng/mL; IQR, 3.50–15.90) or T (n=28, 0.61 ng/mL; IQR, 0.25–1.30); 69.8% had abnormal ECGs and arrhythmias (7 with nonsustained ventricular tachycardia); and 18.7% had left ventricular ejection fraction Conclusions: Most cases of suspected COVID-19 vaccine myocarditis occurring in persons
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF