MRI Detects Myocarditis in College Athletes with COVID-19

A study being presented at RSNA 2021 found that a small but significant percentage of college athletes with COVID-19 develop myocarditis. Clinicians at schools in the highly competitive Big Ten athletic conference collaborated to collect data on the frequency of myocarditis in

student-athletes recovering from COVID-19 infection. Conference officials had required all athletes who had COVID-19 to get a series of cardiac tests before returning to play, providing a unique opportunity for researchers to collect data on the athletes’ cardiac status.

Jean Jeudy, MD, professor and radiologist at the University of Maryland School of Medicine in Baltimore, serves as the cardiac MRI core leader for the Big Ten Cardiac Registry. This registry oversaw the collection of all the data from the individual schools of the Big Ten conference. 

Dr. Jeudy reviewed the results of 1,597 cardiac MRI exams collected at the 13 participating schools. There was no selection bias for cardiac MRI, as all

COVID-positive athletes underwent a complete cardiac battery of tests including cardiac MRI, echocardiogram, ECG and blood tests, as well as a complete medical history.

Thirty-seven of the athletes, or 2.3%, were diagnosed with COVID-19 myocarditis, a percentage on par with the incidence of myocarditis in the general population. However, an alarmingly high proportion of the myocarditis cases were found in athletes with no clinical symptoms. Twenty of the patients with COVID-19 myocarditis (54%) had neither cardiac symptoms nor cardiac testing abnormalities. Only cardiac MRI identified the problem.

“Testing patients for clinical symptoms of myocarditis only captured a small percentage of all patients who had myocardial inflammation,” Dr. Jeudy said.

“Cardiac MRI for all athletes yielded a 7.4-fold increase in detection.”

The implications of post-COVID-19 myocardial injury detected by cardiac MRI are still unknown.

“The main issue is the presence of persistent inflammation and/or myocardial scar,” Dr. Jeudy said. “Each of these can be an underlying foundation for additional damage and increased risk of arrhythmia.”

As part of the study, Dr. Jeudy and colleagues continue to add to the Big Ten Cardiac Registry to gain more understanding.

“We still don’t know the long-term effects,” Dr. Jeudy said. “Some athletes had issues that resolved within a month, but we also have athletes with continued abnormalities on their MRI as a result of their initial injury and scarring. There are a lot of chronic issues with COVID-19 that we need to know more about, and hopefully this registry can be one of the major parts of getting that information.”

The registry will allow researchers to look beyond the presence of abnormalities and study things like changes in exercise function over time.

“These are young patients, and the effects of myocardial inflammation can potentially impact their lives more significantly than in older patients,” Dr. Jeudy said. “That’s why we really want to push forward and continue to collect this data.”

Obstacles to widespread use of cardiac MRI in college athletes are significant and include cost and lack of access to advanced MRI capability at many centers. But, as the new study shows, cardiac MRI adds considerable value to cardiac testing.

“The role of cardiac MRI as a screening tool in this population needs to be explored,” Dr. Jeudy said. “The reality is that there are a small percentage of cases where we know the athletes have an increased risk for sudden death, and using cardiac MRI will increase the number of players who are identified.”

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