Myocarditis and inflammatory bowel diseases: A single-center experience and a systematic literature review

Int J Cardiol. 2023 Apr 1:376:165-171. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2023.01.071. Epub 2023 Feb 3.

Abstract

Background: Myocarditis and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are rare conditions, but may coexist. Myocarditis in IBD may be infective, immune-mediated, or due to mesalamine toxicity. A gap of knowledge exists on the clinical features of patients that present myocarditis in association with IBD, especially for endomyocardial biopsy-proven cases. Our aims are: 1) to describe the clinical characteristics of patients with an associated diagnosis of myocarditis and IBD in a single-center hospital, 2) to perform a systematic review of the literature of analogous cases.

Methods: We retrospectively analyzed data of patients followed up at the outpatient Cardio-immunology and Gastroenterology Clinic of Padua University Hospital, to identify those with an associated diagnosis of myocarditis and IBD. In addition, a systematic review of the literature was conducted. We performed a qualitative analysis of the overall study population.

Results: The study included 104 patients (21 from our single center cohort, 83 from the literature review). Myocarditis in IBD more frequently affects young (median age 31 years) males (72%), predominantly with infarct-like presentation (58%), within an acute phase of the IBD (67%) and with an overall benign clinical course (87%). Nevertheless, a not negligible quote of patients may present giant cell myocarditis, deserve immunosuppression and have a chronic, or even fatal course. Histological evidence of mesalamine hypersensitivity is scarce and its incidence may be overestimated.

Conclusions: Our study shows that myocarditis in association with IBD, if correctly managed, may have a spontaneous benign course, but predictors of worse prognosis must be promptly recognized.

Keywords: Autoimmunity; Giant cell myocarditis; Inflammatory bowel diseases; Mesalamine; Myocarditis; Systemic immune-mediate diseases.

Publication types

  • Systematic Review

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Humans
  • Inflammatory Bowel Diseases* / complications
  • Male
  • Mesalamine
  • Myocarditis* / diagnosis
  • Prognosis
  • Retrospective Studies

Substances

  • Mesalamine