Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging patterns of acute COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis in young male patients: A first single-center experience

2022 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​Cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging patterns of acute COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis in young male patients: A first single-center experience​
Evertz, R.; Schulz, A.; Lange, T.; Backhaus, S. J. ; Vollmann, D.; Kowallick, J. T.   & Haehling, S. von  et al.​ (2022) 
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine9 art. 965512​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.965512 

Documents & Media

Main article1.16 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Attribution 4.0 CC BY 4.0

Details

Authors
Evertz, Ruben; Schulz, Alexander; Lange, Torben; Backhaus, Sören J. ; Vollmann, Dirk; Kowallick, Johannes T. ; Haehling, Stephan von ; Hasenfuß, Gerd ; Schuster, Andreas 
Abstract
Background The risk of myocarditis after mRNA vaccination against COVID-19 has emerged recently. Current evidence suggests that young male patients are predominantly affected. In the majority of the cases, only mild symptoms were observed. However, little is known about cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging patterns in mRNA-related myocarditis and their differences when compared to classical viral myocarditis in the acute phase of inflammation. Methods and results In total, 10 mRNA vaccination-associated patients with myocarditis were retrospectively enrolled in this study and compared to 10 patients suffering from viral myocarditis, who were matched for age, sex, comorbidities, and laboratory markers. All patients ( n = 20) were hospitalized and underwent a standardized clinical examination, as well as an echocardiography and a CMR. Both, clinical and imaging findings and, in particular, functional and volumetric CMR assessments, as well as detailed tissue characterization using late gadolinium enhancement and T1 + T2-weighted sequences, were compared between both groups. The median age of the overall cohort was 26 years (group 1: 25.5; group 2: 27.5; p = 0.57). All patients described chest pain as the leading reason for their initial presentation. CMR volumetric and functional parameters did not differ significantly between both groups. In all cases, the lateral left ventricular wall showed late gadolinium enhancement without significant differences in terms of the localization or in-depth tissue characterization (late gadolinium enhancement [LGE] enlargement: group 1: 5.4%; group 2: 6.5%; p = 0.14; T2 global/maximum value: group 1: 38.9/52 ms; group 2: 37.8/54.5 ms; p = 0.79 and p = 0.80). Conclusion This study yielded the first evidence that COVID-19 mRNA vaccine-associated myocarditis does not show specific CMR patterns during the very acute stage in the most affected patient group of young male patients. The observed imaging markers were closely related to regular viral myocarditis in our cohort. Additionally, we could not find any markers implying adverse outcomes in this relatively little number of patients; however, this has to be confirmed by future studies that will include larger sample sizes.
Issue Date
2022
Journal
Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine 
Organization
Klinik für Kardiologie und Pneumologie ; Deutsches Zentrum für Herz-Kreislauf-Forschung e.V. ; Universitätsmedizin Göttingen ; Institut für Diagnostische und Interventionelle Radiologie 
eISSN
2297-055X
Sponsor
Open-Access-Publikationsfonds 2022

Reference

Citations


Social Media