The COVID-19 pandemic brought the global world of sports to a staggering halt. In
unprecedented fashion and with few exceptions, professional leagues, mass participation
endurance events, and youth sport around the globe went silent. In the face of a rapidly
evolving health crisis, the decision to cancel or postpone sporting events was a logical
and necessary step. COVID-19 is a highly contagious, potentially fatal virus that
is transmitted primarily through contact with aerosolised or surface-dwelling respiratory
secretions, a process that requires close human contact.1 Competitive sport as we
know it, from athletes ‘elbowing’ one another for position on the pitch to arenas
packed with fans, may be the quintessential antithesis of social distancing. There
is concern that the Champions League match between Atalanta and Valencia in Milan
may have influenced the trajectory of COVID-19 cases in Europe.2 In the absence of
a vaccination or curative intervention, physical distancing emerged as the key step
to slow or stop the spread of COVID-19. Thus, the decision to turn off the lights
and to silence competitive athletics represented a logical, essential and highly visible
component in the global fight against COVID-19.
This has been an unusually quiet time for the sports medicine community. Athletic
training rooms have gone dark, and many clinicians have been repurposed to meet the
needs of patients with COVID-19. Fortunately, this will not last forever. The great
American poet Robert Frost once said, ‘In three words I can sum up everything I’ve
learnt about life. It goes on’, and indeed, there are early signs of progress in the
fight against COVID-19. As rates of new infection begin to plateau and even decline
in some countries, there is mounting enthusiasm for a resurrection of sport. When
it finally comes, the first serve, the first kickoff and the first starter’s gun will
aid in global recovery and the redefining of normal life. We eagerly await this day,
but proceeding too soon and without a unified and purposeful approach by the sports
medicine community to ensure the health and wellness of our athletes may prove disastrous.
Cardiovascular complications and COVID-19
COVID-19 is a systemic illness that effects most major organs, including the cardiovascular
system.3 Clinical experience, largely the care of critically ill patients with COVID-19,
has taught us that COVID-19 may affect the heart in at least two fundamental ways.
First, the intense ‘cytokine storm’ that develops during severe COVID-19 illness may
lead to decrements in cardiac function, similar to those seen in other forms of sepsis,
with features that overlap with classic forms of ‘stress’ or catecholamine-induced
cardiomyopathy.4 To date, this appears to be a self-limiting phenomenon confined to
the severe phases of the illness. Alternatively, COVID-19 may directly infect myocardial
cells, leading to myocarditis with lymphocyte-rich inflammatory histology, acute impairment
of cardiac muscle function and potentially residual chronic scar with increased vulnerability
to malignant ventricular arrhythmias. While COVID-19 myocardial injury, as defined
by increases in circulating cardiac troponin levels, has been described in up to 28%
of the sickest of patients,5 its prevalence and clinical implications among infected
people who experience mild illness or who remain asymptomatic remains completely unknown.
Further, the incidence of silent myocardial inflammation that lingers long after the
resolution of typical COVID-19 symptoms, a form of disease that may uniquely affect
athletes during resumption of training and competition, is also completely unknown.
Cardiac testing in athletes with COVID-19
Numerous medical and sporting organisations are developing comprehensive strategies
to ensure a safe return to training and competition. This is a complex process that
will require a multidisciplinary, team-based approach that balances priorities surrounding
athlete health with strategies to protect the general public from further spread of
the infection. Ensuring the health of athletes will involve continued strategic use
of physical distancing, widespread dissemination of COVID-19 antigen and antibody
testing, the use of electrocardiography or blood biomarker testing to screen for occult
myocardial injury and inflammation, and definitive diagnostic and therapeutic strategies
for those deemed at highest risk. Evidence is limited, and conclusive recommendations
regarding these issues will require ongoing research and monitoring of athletes afflicted
with COVID-19. However, we take this opportunity to provide some initial guidance
for the cardiac evaluation of athletes with prior COVID-19 infection (table 1).
Table 1
Cardiac evaluation in athletes with prior COVID-19 infection
Clinical scenario
Recommended assessment
Comments
Athletes with prior asymptomatic infection as confirmed antibody to severe acute respiratory
syndrome coronavirus 2
Focused medical history and physical examination to screen for findings newly emergent
in the COVID-19 eraConsider 12-lead ECG*
If ECG is abnormal or shows new repolarisation changes compared with a prior ECG,
then additional evaluation with minimum echocardiogram and exercise test is warranted
in conjunction with a sports cardiologist.
Myopericarditis related to COVID-19 should be considered in patients with a history
of new-onset chest pain/pressure (even in the absence of fever and respiratory symptoms),
palpitations or exercise intolerance.
Comprehensive clinical evaluation, regardless of ECG findings, is indicated in athletes
with new-onset cardiovascular symptoms or exercise intolerance.
Athletes with a history of mild illness (non-hospitalised) related to confirmed or
suspected COVID-19
Focused medical history and physical examination to screen for persistent or new postinfectious
findings following COVID-19 infectionPerform 12-lead ECG*
If ECG is abnormal or shows new repolarisation changes compared with a prior ECG,
then additional individualised evaluation is warranted, including at minimum echocardiography
and exercise testing, in conjunction with a sports cardiologist.
ECG findings that may indicate viral-induced myocardial injury include pathological
Q waves, ST segment depression, (new) diffuse ST segment elevation and T-wave inversion.
Comprehensive clinical evaluation, regardless of ECG findings, is indicated in athletes
with new-onset cardiovascular symptoms or exercise intolerance.
Athletes with a history of moderate to severe illness (hospitalised) related to confirmed
or suspected COVID-19
Comprehensive evaluation prior to return to sport, in conjunction with a sports cardiologist,
to include blood biomarker assessment (ie, hs-Tn and NP), 12-lead ECG, echocardiography,
exercise testing and ambulatory rhythm monitoring
Myocardial injury is more likely in patients with a more severe disease course, and
normal cardiac function and exercise tolerance should be established prior to a return
to exercise.
Cardiac MRI may be considered based on clinical suspicion of myocardial injury.†
Athletes with a history of COVID-19 infection (regardless of severity) and documented
myocardial injury as indicated by one or more of the following: in-hospital ECG changes,
hs-Tn or NP elevation, arrhythmia or impaired cardiac function
Comprehensive evaluation prior to return to sport, in conjunction with a sports cardiologist,
to include blood biomarker assessment (ie, hs-Tn and NP), 12-lead ECG, echocardiography,
exercise testing, ambulatory rhythm monitoring and cardiac MRI.†
Return to training should be gradual and under the supervision of a cardiologist.
Longitudinal follow-up, including serial cardiac imaging, may be required in athletes
with initially abnormal cardiac function.
*ECG as a screening test to exclude myocarditis is limited. ECG in patients with myocarditis
may be normal or may show non-specific abnormalities. Additional evaluation may be
warranted based on clinical suspicion.
†Cardiac MRI should be performed with gadolinium to assess for myocardial scar and
LGE. The presence of LGE is associated with a higher risk of major adverse cardiovascular
events.
hs-Tn, high-sensitivity cardiac troponin; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; NP, natriuretic
peptide.
Trading one preparticipation evaluation (PPE) for another
In lieu of these complexities, we also want to address a simple and well-known strategy
that may prove more important than ever before. Oversight of the PPE (not in this
case personal protective equipment) is a fundamental responsibility of sport medicine
providers.6 From the perspective of heart health, the PPE is traditionally viewed
as a tool to screen for occult cardiovascular diseases that predispose the athlete
to sudden death. In the wake of COVID-19, it will be prudent to adopt a broader view
of the cardiovascular PPE. In addition to using the PPE to search for rare genetic
and congenital conditions, we will be best positioned to facilitate safe return to
sport if we also use the PPE to screen for cardiovascular sequelae of COVID-19. Though
imperfect, medical history and physical examination may prove to be valuable tools
for identifying athletes with underlying myocardial inflammation and/or overt myocarditis.
In addition, practitioners and organisations that are experienced and resourced in
the use of 12-lead electrocardiography will optimise this screening adjunct by keeping
a keen eye out for patterns reflective of myocardial inflammation, such as T-wave
inversions and new ST segment changes.7 This can and will help to identify those athletes
that may require additional testing and medical care prior to return to play.
The resumption of competitive athletics will bring great joy but will come with considerable
challenge and additional efforts to ensure cardiac safety. There are fundamental questions
about how COVID-19 will leave its mark on the millions of athletes worldwide and what
steps should be taken to prevent further unnecessary loss of life. While these questions
will be asked by the men and women on the front lines of athlete care, they will only
be answered by the sharing of experiences and the pooling of rigorously collected
data. If done effectively, the connotation of the acronym PPE will once again relate
solely to the PPE rather than to the use of surgical masks and face shields that have
defined this pandemic.