Trial Report Characterization of change in cognition before and after COVID-19 infection in essential workers at midlife, 2024, Sekendiz et al.

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by SNT Gatchaman, Aug 16, 2024.

  1. SNT Gatchaman

    SNT Gatchaman Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Characterization of change in cognition before and after COVID-19 infection in essential workers at midlife
    Sekendiz; Morozova; Carr; Fontana; Mehta; Ali; Jiang; Babalola; Clouston; Luft

    BACKGROUND
    Research into COVID-19-related cognitive decline focused on individuals who are cognitively impaired following hospitalization for COVID-19. Thus, our objective was to determine whether cognitive decline emerges with the onset of COVID-19 and if it is more pronounced in patients with Post-Acute Sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC).

    METHODS
    We analyzed longitudinal cognitive data collected during a cohort study of essential workers pre-dating the COVID-19 pandemic. We used longitudinal discontinuity models, a form of causal modeling, to model the change in cognitive performance among 276 participants with COVID-19 in comparison to contemporaneously collected information from 217 participants who did not have COVID-19 across four domains of cognition using data collected before and after the pandemic. Eligible study participants were those with validated COVID-19 diagnoses who were observed before having a verified COVID-19 infection who survived their initial infection, and for whom post-COVID-19 information was also available.

    RESULTS
    The mean age of the COVID-19 group was 56.0±6.6 years, while that of the control group was 58.1±7.3 years. Longitudinal models indicated a significant decline in cognitive throughput (β=-0.168, P=.001) following COVID-19, after adjustment for pre-COVID-19 functioning, demographics, and medical factors. Observed changes in throughput were equivalent to 10.6 years of normal aging. COVID-19 was associated with observed cognitive decline and was worse among patients with PASC or severe COVID-19.

    CONCLUSIONS
    Findings from this longitudinal causal modeling study revealed that COVID-19 and PASC appeared to accelerate cognitive deterioration, especially in executive function.

    Link | PDF (American Journal of Medicine Open)
     
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