ESC 2025 Guidelines for the Management of Myocarditis and Pericarditis
Comprehensive Summary: Imaging Recommendations with Focus on CMR
Citation: Schulz-Menger J, Imazio M, et al. European Heart Journal 2025;46:3952-4041
Significance: This is the first dedicated ESC guideline for myocarditis and pericarditis, representing a major advancement in standardizing diagnosis and management.
1. Paradigm Change in Myocarditis Diagnosis
The guidelines introduce a fundamental shift: CMR can now provide a “definitive clinical diagnosis” of myocarditis, elevating its role from supportive to diagnostic. This parallels (rather than replaces) endomyocardial biopsy (EMB).
Diagnostic Framework: - CMR-proven myocarditis: Clinical presentation + 2/2 updated Lake Louise Criteria fulfilled - CMR-uncertain: Clinical presentation + only 1/2 Lake Louise Criteria - CMR-rejected: Negative CMR findings
2. CMR Recommendations (Recommendation Table 3)
For Myocarditis
| Recommendation | Class | Level |
|---|---|---|
| CMR recommended in suspected myocarditis for diagnosis, including assessment of oedema, ischaemia, and necrosis/fibrosis/scarring | I | B |
| CMR recommended for follow-up within 6 months to identify healed vs ongoing process, for risk stratification, personalised therapy, and return to exercise | I | B |
For Pericarditis
| Recommendation | Class | Level |
|---|---|---|
| CMR recommended when diagnosis cannot be made using clinical criteria, to assess pericardial thickening, oedema, LGE, and persistence of disease | I | B |
3. Updated Lake Louise Criteria (2018)
The guidelines adopt the updated Lake Louise Criteria as established by Ferreira et al.¹
CMR diagnosis requires at least 1 T2-based criterion + at least 1 T1-based criterion:
T2-based criteria (oedema marker): - Global or regional increase in myocardial T2 relaxation time - Increased signal intensity on T2-weighted imaging
T1-based criteria (injury/fibrosis marker): - Increased myocardial T1 (native) - Increased extracellular volume (ECV) - Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) in non-ischaemic pattern
Pattern recognition: - LGE typically mid-wall or subepicardial (not following coronary distribution) - Lateral and inferior walls most commonly affected - Certain patterns suggest specific aetiologies (e.g., ring-like septal LGE in desmoplakin cardiomyopathy)
4. Technical Considerations
Timing: CMR has highest diagnostic accuracy when performed within the first 2 weeks of symptom onset.
Tissue characterisation targets: 1. Myocardial oedema (T2 mapping, T2-weighted imaging) 2. Hyperaemia and capillary leak (T1 mapping, ECV) 3. Necrosis/fibrosis (LGE)
Limitations addressed: - Ferromagnetic implants cause artefacts but dedicated techniques now available - CMR feasible in intubated patients with fast/motion-corrected imaging - Non-conditional devices: CMR possible with clear clinical indication if other modalities unhelpful
Important caveat: CMR evidence of inflammation does NOT provide the underlying histotype (viral vs immune-mediated vs other)—EMB still needed for this in selected cases.
5. Risk Stratification by Imaging Findings
High-Risk Features (imaging criteria):
- Extensive LGE (≥2 segments)
- Reduced LVEF
- Pericardial effusion with tamponade features
- Extensive pericardial LGE on CMR
Low-Risk Features:
- Minimal or no LGE (<2 segments)
- Normal LVEF
- No pericardial effusion or small stable effusion
- Resolution of oedema on follow-up CMR
6. Other Imaging Modalities
Echocardiography
- First-line imaging in all suspected cases (Class I)
- Strain imaging (speckle tracking/TDI) can detect subclinical dysfunction
- Monitors: chamber size, ventricular function, wall thickness, pericardial effusion
- Less specific than CMR but widely available
CT (Recommendation Table 4)
- Class I for evaluating pericardial thickness, calcifications, masses, loculated effusions
- Important pre-pericardiectomy for calcification burden assessment
Nuclear Medicine (Recommendation Table 5)
- FDG-PET/CT: Class IIa when echo and CMR inconclusive
- Requires carbohydrate-free preparation protocol
- Particularly useful for cardiac sarcoidosis and extracardiac involvement
- Alternative when CMR unsuitable (irregular rhythm, device artefacts)
7. Follow-up Imaging Protocol
The guidelines emphasise that follow-up CMR within 6 months is Class I recommended to: - Distinguish healed myocarditis from ongoing/chronic inflammation - Inform decisions on return to exercise (especially athletes) - Guide therapy duration - Provide prognostic information
Evidence supporting serial CMR comes from multiple studies demonstrating that CMR detects persistent disease activity even when biomarkers have normalised.² The prognostic value of repeat CMR has been established in studies showing that patients with persistent LGE + oedema have significantly worse outcomes (86% cardiac event rate over 7 years) compared to those with complete resolution (0% events).³
Key prognostic indicators on follow-up: - Persistent oedema = ongoing inflammation - New or increasing LGE = progression - Resolution of oedema with stable/decreasing LGE = healing
8. Clinical Algorithms Integration
CMR is positioned as a key decision node in all diagnostic pathways: - Chest pain presentation: CMR to differentiate myocarditis from ACS - Heart failure presentation: CMR for tissue characterisation - Arrhythmia presentation: CMR to detect inflammatory substrate - Pericarditis with diagnostic uncertainty: CMR for tissue diagnosis
9. Summary: What Clinicians Should Do
- Order CMR early (within 2 weeks) in suspected myocarditis
- Use multiparametric protocol: T1 mapping, T2 mapping, ECV, LGE
- Apply updated Lake Louise Criteria for interpretation
- Plan follow-up CMR at ~6 months for risk stratification
- Consider FDG-PET if CMR inconclusive or contraindicated
- Reserve EMB for high-risk patients or when histotype knowledge changes management
Key CMR References
Ferreira VM, Schulz-Menger J, Holmvang G, et al. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance in nonischemic myocardial inflammation: expert recommendations. J Am Coll Cardiol 2018;72:3158-76. [Updated Lake Louise Criteria]
Berg J, Kottwitz J, Baltensperger N, et al. Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in myocarditis reveals persistent disease activity despite normalization of cardiac enzymes and inflammatory parameters at 3-month follow-up. Circ Heart Fail 2017;10:e004262.
Aquaro GD, Ghebru Habtemicael Y, Camastra G, et al. Prognostic value of repeating cardiac magnetic resonance in patients with acute myocarditis. J Am Coll Cardiol 2019;74:2439-48. [Key prognostic serial CMR study; n=202]
Lurz P, Luecke C, Eitel I, et al. Comprehensive cardiac magnetic resonance imaging in patients with suspected myocarditis: the MyoRacer-Trial. J Am Coll Cardiol 2016;67:1800-11. [Multiparametric CMR diagnostic accuracy]
Document prepared for www.cardiac-imaging.org Last updated: January 2026