Disease areas:
  • infections
Last updated:
Author(s):
Sucharitha Chadalavada, Ahmed Salih, Hafiz Naderi, Elisa Rauseo, Jackie Cooper, Stefan van Duijvenboden, Anwar A. Chahal, Gaith S. Dabbagh, Liliana Szabo, Mohammed Y. Khanji, Jose D. Vargas, Mihir Sanghvi, Kenneth Fung, Jose Paiva, Stefan K. Piechnik, Betty Raman, Patricia B. Munroe, Aaron Mark Lee, Alborz Amir-Khalili, Luca Biasiolli, John P. Greenwood, Paul M. Matthews, Wenjia Bai, Stefan Neubauer, Nay Aung, Nicholas C. Harvey, Zahra Raisi-Estabragh, Steffen E. Petersen
Publish date:
10 September 2025
Journal:
Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance
PubMed ID:
40939695

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and electrocardiographic (ECG) abnormalities after coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are widely reported. However, the absence of pre-infection assessments limits causal inference from these studies. This study aims to compare interval change in CMR and ECG measures in participants with incident COVID-19 and matched uninfected controls in UK Biobank.

METHODS: UK Biobank participants with documented COVID-19 who had CMR and ECG performed before the pandemic were invited for repeat assessment, along with uninfected participants matched on age, sex, ethnicity, location, and date of baseline imaging. Automated pipelines were used to extract ECG phenotypes and CMR measures of cardiac structure and function, aortic distensibility, aortic flow, and myocardial native T1. Logistic regression was used to examine associations of baseline metrics with incident COVID-19. Standardized residual approach was used to compare the degree of interval change in CMR and ECG metrics between cases and controls.

RESULTS: We analyzed 2092 participants (1079 cases and 1013 controls) with average age of 60 ± 7 years. 47.1% were male. There was 3.2 ± 1.5 years between pre- and post-infection assessments. 3.6% of cases were hospitalized. Lower baseline left ventricular ejection fraction and worse longitudinal, circumferential, and radial strain were associated with higher risk of incident COVID-19. There were no significant differences in interval change of any CMR or ECG metric between cases and controls.

CONCLUSION: While pre-existing cardiovascular abnormalities are linked to higher risk of COVID-19, exposure to infection does not alter interval change of highly sensitive CMR and ECG indicators of cardiovascular health.

Related projects

Imaging of the heart and blood vessels is performed in a large subset of the UK Biobank cohort. Many measures defining the state of the…

Institution:
Queen Mary University of London, Great Britain

All projects