BackgroundElevation of cardiac troponin (cTn) is associated with the worst prognosis not only in cardiovascular disease but also in non-cardiovascular disease. The aim of this study is to verify if cTn has a prognostic role in elderly and very elderly coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients. MethodsThis study enrolled consecutive COVID-19 elderly patients hospitalized at INRCA hospital, with available admission high sensitivity cardiac troponin T (HS-cTnT) level. Patients were divided into three groups based on HS-cTnT level: group A (Hs-cTnT ≤ 40 pg/ml), group B (Hs-cTnT 41-100 pg/ml), and group C (Hs-cTnT ≥ 101 pg/ml). The correlation between HS-cTnT levels and mortality rates was analyzed. Results461 patients (mean age 86 years; 59% female) were divided into group A (261 patients), group B (129 patients), and group C (71 patients). Group C resulted significantly older, more affected by heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, and dementia, and with higher levels of creatinine, C-reactive protein, pro-calcitonin, interleukin-6, ferritin, NT-proBNP, D-dimer then group A and group B. Mortality rate increased significantly across groups (group A: 18.4%; group B: 36.4%; group C: 62.0%; p<0.001). Group C had a significant increase in mortality risk compared to group A, both univariate analysis (HR 3.78) and multivariate analysis (model 2 HR 3.10; model 3 HR 3.59; model 4 HR 1.72). ConclusionHS-cTnT has demonstrated a prognostic role in elderly and very elderly COVID-19 patients. HS-cTnT is a simple and inexpensive laboratory exam that gives clinicians important information on mortality risk stratification.