Diagnostic utility of electrocardiogram in screening patients post-COVID-19: a prospective multicentre follow-up study

Azlan Abd Samat, Mark Cassar, Mohammed Akhtar, Celeste McCracken , Zakariye Ashkir, Rebecca Mills, Lucy Finnigan, Godwin Ogbole, Elizabeth Tunnicliffe, Elena Lukaschuk, Stefan K. Piechnik, Vanessa Ferreira, Chrysovalantou Nikolaidou, Najib Rahman, Ling-Pei Ho, Alastair Moss, Charlotte Manisty, Declan P. O'Regan, Jonathan Weir-McCall, Rick SteedsDaniel Cuthbertson, Graham Kemp, Alexander Horsley, Christopher Miller, Caitlin O'brien, Amedeo Chiribiri, Susan Francis, J Chalmers, Sven Plein, James M. Wild, Thomas A. Treibel, Michael Marks, Mark Toshner, Louise V. Wain, Gerald Cann, Adam Lewandowski, Masliza Mahmod, Stefan Neubauer, Betty Raman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background
The role of ECG in ruling out myocardial complications on cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is unclear. We examined the clinical utility of ECG in screening for cardiac abnormalities on CMR among post-hospitalised COVID-19 patients.

Methods
Post-hospitalised patients (n = 212) and age, sex and comorbidity-matched controls (n = 38) underwent CMR and 12‑lead ECG in a prospective multicenter follow-up study. Participants were screened for routinely reported ECG abnormalities, including arrhythmia, conduction and R wave abnormalities and ST-T changes (excluding repolarisation intervals). Quantitative repolarisation analyses included corrected QT (QTc), corrected QT dispersion (QTc disp), corrected JT (JTc) and corrected T peak-end (cTPe) intervals.

Results
At a median of 5.6 months, patients had a higher burden of ECG abnormalities (72.2% vs controls 42.1%, p = 0.001) and lower LVEF but a comparable cumulative burden of CMR abnormalities than controls. Patients with CMR abnormalities had more ECG abnormalities and longer repolarisation intervals than those with normal CMR and controls (82% vs 69% vs 42%, p < 0.001). Routinely reported ECG abnormalities had poor discriminative ability (area-under-the-receiver-operating curve: AUROC) for abnormal CMR, AUROC 0.56 (95% CI 0.47–0.65), p = 0.185; worse among female than male patients. Adding JTc and QTc disp improved the AUROC to 0.64 (95% CI 0.55–0.74), p = 0.002, the sensitivity of the ECG increased from 81.6% to 98.0%, negative predictive value from 84.7% to 96.3%, negative likelihood ratio from 0.60 to 0.13, and reduced sex-dependence variabilities of ECG diagnostic parameters.

Conclusion
Post-hospitalised COVID-19 patients have more ECG abnormalities than controls. Normal ECGs, including normal repolarisation intervals, reliably exclude CMR abnormalities in male and female patients.
Original languageEnglish
Article number132415
JournalInternational Journal of Cardiology
Volume415
Early online date8 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 8 Aug 2024

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Diagnostic utility of electrocardiogram in screening patients post-COVID-19: a prospective multicentre follow-up study'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this