by Yann Marquet,
Guillaume Hékimian, Guillaume Lebreton, Mathieu Kerneis, Philippe Rouvier,
Pierre Bay, Alexis Mathian, Nicolas Bréchot, Juliette Chommeloux, Matthieu
Petit, Melchior Gautier, Lucie Lefevre, Ouriel Saura, David Levy, Paul
Quentric, Quentin Moyon…
Annals of
Intensive Care volume 13,
Article number: 78 (2023)
Background
Fulminant myocarditis is a rare and severe disease whose
definite and etiological diagnoses rely on pathological examination. Albeit,
myocardial biopsy can be associated with significant morbidity and mortality,
its therapeutic consequences are unclear. We conducted a study to determine the
diagnostic yield, the safety and the therapeutic consequences of myocardial
biopsy in patients with fulminant clinically suspected myocarditis unweanable
from mechanical circulatory support (MCS).
Methods
Monocenter, retrospective, observational cohort study in a
26-bed French tertiary ICU between January 2002 and February 2019. Inclusion of
all fulminant clinically suspected myocarditis patients undergoing in-ICU
myocardial biopsy while being on MCS. The primary endpoint was the proportion
of patients classified as definite myocarditis using Bonaca criteria before and
after including myocardial biopsy results.
Results
Forty-seven patients (median age 41 [30–47], female 53%)
were included: 55% died before hospital discharge, 34% could be
bridged-to-recovery and 15% bridged-to-transplant. Myocardial biopsy was
endomyocardial or surgical in 36% and 64% cases respectively. Tamponade
requiring emergency pericardiocentesis occurred in 29% patients after endomyocardial
biopsy. After adding the biopsy results in the Bonaca classification algorithm
the percentage of definite myocarditis raised from 13 to 55% (p < 0.0001).
The rate of biopsy-related treatments modifications was 13%, leading to
patients’ recovery in only 4% patients.
Conclusions
In clinically suspected myocarditis unweanable from MCS,
myocardial biopsy increased the rate of definite myocarditis but was associated
with a low rate of treatment modification and a significant proportion of
adverse events. We believe the benefit/risk ratio of myocardial biopsy should
be more carefully weighted in these frail and selected patients than suggested
by actual guidelines. Further prospective studies are now needed to determine
its value in patients under MCS.
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