Characterizing Long COVID Symptoms During Early Childhood, 2025, Gross et al.

SNT Gatchaman

Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Staff member
Characterizing Long COVID Symptoms During Early Childhood
Rachel S. Gross and 674 others

IMPORTANCE
Recent studies have identified characteristic symptom patterns of long COVID (LC) in adults and children older than 5 years. However, LC remains poorly characterized in early childhood. This knowledge gap limits efforts to identify, care for, and prevent LC in this vulnerable population.

OBJECTIVES
To identify symptoms that had the greatest difference in frequency comparing children with a history of SARS-CoV-2 infection to those without, to identify differences in the types of symptoms by age group (infants/toddlers [0-2 years] vs preschool-aged children [3-5 years]), and to derive an index that can be used in research studies to identify young children with LC.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS
This was a multisite longitudinal cohort study with enrollment from over 30 US health care and community settings, including infants, toddlers, and preschool-aged children with and without SARS-CoV-2 infection history. Study data were analyzed from May to December 2024.

EXPOSURE
SARS-CoV-2 infection.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES
LC and 41 symptoms among infants/toddlers and 75 symptoms among preschool-aged children.

RESULTS
The study included 472 infants/toddlers (mean [SD] age, 12 [9] months; 278 infected with SARS-CoV-2; 194 uninfected; 234 male [50%]; 73 Black or African American [16%]; 198 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish [43%]; 242 White [52%]) and 539 preschool-aged children (mean [SD] age, 48 [10] months; 399 infected with SARS-CoV-2; 140 uninfected; 277 female [51%]; 70 Black or African American [13%]; 210 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish [39%]; 287 White [54%]). The median (IQR) time between first infections and completion of symptom surveys was 318 (198-494) days for infants/toddlers and 520 (330-844) days for preschool-aged children. A research index was derived for each age group based on symptoms most associated with infection history. The index is calculated by summing scores assigned to each prolonged symptom that was present, where higher scores indicate greater magnitude of association with history of SARS-CoV-2 infection: poor appetite (5 points), trouble sleeping (3.5 points), wet cough (3.5 points), dry cough (3 points), and stuffy nose (0.5 points) for infants/toddlers, and daytime tiredness/sleepiness/low energy (6.5 points) and dry cough (3 points) for preschool-aged children. Among infants/toddlers with infection, 40 of 278 (14%) were classified as having probable LC by having an index of at least 4 points. Among preschool-aged children, 61 of 399 (15%) were classified as having probable LC by having an index of at least 3 points. Participants with higher indices often had poorer overall health, lower quality of life, and perceived delays in developmental milestones.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE
This cohort study identified symptom patterns and derived research indices that were distinct between the 2 age groups and differed from those previously identified in older ages, demonstrating the need to characterize LC separately across age ranges.

Link | PDF (JAMA Pediatrics)
 
The findings that infants/toddlers and preschool-aged children have varied symptoms may be explained by the fact that symptoms in younger children are reported based on what caregivers can observe rather than what the children themselves are feeling and describing, because most children in this age group do not yet have the language, social skills, or understanding of symptoms to share what they are experiencing. For example, fears and feelings of pain, brain fog, headache, tiredness, or changes in taste and smell may be hard to identify if the child cannot verbalize their internal feelings or sensations, whereas a symptom such as cough is easily observed. A further complication is that the identified symptoms may occur commonly in young children because of their naive immune systems. Daytime sleepiness, trouble sleeping, cough, stuffy nose, and poor appetite can occur in many acute and chronic early childhood illnesses.
 
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1085363

News Release 27-May-2025
Researchers identify key symptoms of long COVID in young children
Peer-Reviewed Publication

Mass General Brigham

Long COVID—symptoms that linger long after initial viral infection—can affect people of every age, including children. But the lasting symptoms in an infant, toddler, or pre-school-aged child may be different than symptoms in adults and older children. A new study conducted by researchers at Mass General Brigham and their colleagues as part of the federally funded RECOVER initiative examined the most common long COVID symptoms in young children, finding that infants and toddlers (younger than 2 years old) were more likely to experience trouble sleeping, fussiness, poor appetite, stuffy nose, and cough. Preschool-aged children (3 to 5 years old) were more likely to have a dry cough and daytime tiredness/low energy. Results are published in JAMA Pediatrics.

“This study is important because it shows that long COVID symptoms in young children are different from those in older children and adults,” said co-first author Tanayott (Tony) Thaweethai, PhD, associate director of Biostatistics Research and Engagement at Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system. Thaweethai is also an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School. “Children with these symptoms often had worse overall health, lower quality of life, and delays in development.”

The new study is the latest publication from National Institutes of Health (NIH)-funded Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) initiative, which seeks to explore the effects of long COVID across all ages. This paper builds on a previously published study that examined long COVID symptoms in school-aged children (6 to 11 years old) and teenagers (12 to 17 years old). In this new study, Thaweethai and fellow RECOVER researchers focused on younger age groups, infants and toddlers and preschool-age children. The study included 472 infants/toddlers and 539 preschool-aged children, some of whom had previously had COVID and some who had not. Children were enrolled between March 2022 and July 2024 from over 30 U.S. health care and community settings.

Researchers looked at a variety of caregiver-reported symptoms lasting at least 90 days after COVID infection for both age groups—41 symptoms in the infant/toddler group and 75 symptoms among preschool-aged children. They compared children who had not been previously infected to those with a history of COVID to see which symptoms persisted. Among children who had been previously infected, 40 of 278 infants/toddlers (14%) and 61 of 399 preschool-aged children (15%) were classified as likely having long COVID.

“We found a distinguishable pattern for both age groups of young children, including symptoms that are different than what we see in older children and adults,” said co-senior author Andrea Foulkes, ScD, director of Biostatistics at MGH, professor in the Department of Medicine at Harvard Medical School, and professor in the Department of Biostatistics at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “The tools from this study can be used in future studies to better understand long COVID in young children and develop ways to care for them.”

The authors note that the symptoms reported in the paper have been identified for research purposes, not for making a clinical diagnosis and that caregivers should talk to a child’s clinician if they are concerned about symptoms of long COVID. They also note that their study relies on survey data, which can be affected by recall bias and may be difficult to report accurately for children too young to verbalize their symptoms and where antibody confirmation of infection may be incomplete.



Authorship: Mass General Brigham authors include Tanayott Thaweethai, Deepti B. Pant, Elizabeth W. Karlson, Lori B. Chibnik, Aparna Krishnamoorthy, Andrea S. Foulkes, Marie-Abele C. Bind , James Chan, Zoe Guan, Richard E. Morse, and Harrison T. Reeder. Additional authors include Rachel S. Gross, Amy L. Salisbury, Lawrence C. Kleinman, Sindhu Mohandas, Kyung E. Rhee, Jessica N. Snowden, Kelan G. Tantisira, David Warburton, John C. Wood, Patricia A. Kinser, Joshua D. Milner, Erika B. Rosenzweig, Katherine Irby, Valerie J. Flaherman, Richard Gallagher, Michelle F. Lamendola-Essel, Denise C. Hasson, Stuart D. Katz, Shonna Yin, Benard P. Dreyer, Frank Blancero, Megan Carmilani, K. Coombs, Megan L. Fitzgerald, Rebecca J. Letts, Aimee K. Peddie, Melissa S. Stockwell, and the RECOVER-Pediatrics Group Authors.

Disclosures: Snowden served on a Pfizer COVID-19 advisory board; Milner served on a scientific advisory board for Blueprint Medicine. Additional disclosures can be found in the paper published in JAMA Pediatrics.

Funding: This study was funded in part by the National Institutes of Health (OT2HL161841, OT2HL161847, OT2HL156812, R01 HL162373).

Paper cited: Gross, R. S. et al. “Characterizing Long COVID Symptoms During Early Childhood” JAMA Pediatrics DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1066



Additional links:

 
https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1085041

News Release 27-May-2025
Characterizing long COVID symptoms during early childhood

JAMA Pediatrics

Peer-Reviewed Publication
JAMA Network

About The Study: This cohort study identified symptom patterns and derived research indices that were distinct between the 2 age groups (infants/toddlers [0-2 years] vs preschool-aged children [3-5 years]) and differed from those previously identified in older ages, demonstrating the need to characterize long COVID separately across age ranges.

Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Rachel S. Gross, MD, MS, email rachel.gross@nyulangone.org.

To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/

(doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1066)

Editor’s Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, conflict of interest and financial disclosures, and funding and support.

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News Release 23-Jul-2025

Study shows a need for vigilance when observing long COVID symptoms in younger children​

Rutgers researchers say clinicians and caregivers may not recognize the symptoms because they are unfamiliar with it

Peer-Reviewed Publication
Rutgers University


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Infants, toddlers and preschoolers exhibit symptoms of long COVID, but the symptoms can be different and more difficult to identify in these children, according to Rutgers Health research.

The new study is part of the National Institutes of Health–funded Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) initiative and published in the Journal of the American Medical Association Pediatrics.

Lawrence Kleinman, a professor and vice chair of the Department of Pediatrics at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and a professor of global public health at Rutgers School of Public Health, is the lead investigator for the Collaborative Long-term study of Outcomes of COVID-19 in Kids (CLOCK), a national consortium led by Rutgers.

“The COVID pandemic began with a myth – that children are spared its ill effects. In contrast, many children were sick with COVID, and we now have a new chronic illness emerging,” Kleinman said. “We are working hard to characterize long COVID in children and it will be critical for policymakers to assure that we have adequate resources to support and manage these children now and in the future.”

Of the total 1,011 children included in the study, 472 were infants and toddlers (children 2 years old or younger) and 539 were preschoolers (children 3 to 5 years old). Overall, 101 (15%) of the 677 children with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection were identified as likely having long COVID. The symptoms of long COVID in these age groups differ from those reported among school age children and teens. Infants and toddlers with long COVID were more likely to experience difficulty sleeping, fussiness, poor appetite, stuffy nose and coughing while preschoolers were more likely to experience coughing and daytime tiredness and low energy.

Researchers said they can confirm that younger children can have long COVID. Clinicians and caregivers may not recognize long COVID in these children because they are unfamiliar with it. The authors explain too that the inability of younger children to describe how they feel may make identification of long COVID more difficult in this age group. For similar reasons it is important for pediatricians and family physicians to consider long COVID when children present with the symptoms described. The failure to diagnose long COVID quickly delays treatment and inhibits availability of supportive services to children with long COVID.

“This study is the largest systematic look at long COVID in younger children in the United States,” said Sunanda Gaur, a professor of pediatrics and director of the Adult and Pediatric Clinical Research Centers at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital. “It suggests that this is an illness that children, families, pediatricians and the health care and educational system will be dealing with for a generation.”

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About RECOVER: The National Institutes of Health Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (NIH RECOVER) Initiative is a $1.15 billion effort, which is supported in part through the American Rescue Plan Act of 2021. It seeks to identify how people recuperate from COVID-19 and who is at risk for developing post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC). Researchers also are working with patients, clinicians and communities across the United States to identify strategies to prevent and treat the long-term effects of COVID, including long COVID. For more information, please visit recovercovid.org.  



Long COVID Pediatric Awareness Week is July 21 to July 25, 2025, and is hosted by Long COVID Families.org.




Journal​

JAMA Pediatrics

DOI​

10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1066

Method of Research​

Data/statistical analysis

Subject of Research​

People

Article Title​

Characterizing Long COVID Symptoms During Early Childhood

Article Publication Date​

27-May-2025
 
I don't see how those are especially different. In fact, this is quite typical, especially when you add the difficulty children have in expressing themselves about it, and the expectations of those listening to them, which always make most of the work.

But one big correction is that it was not a myth that children were spared, it was a blatant lie, repeated again and again for no other reason than to have people believe in the lie. And it's still going strong.
“It suggests that this is an illness that children, families, pediatricians and the health care and educational system will be dealing with for a generation.”
Not sure if "dealing with" is the right term here. Neglecting, perhaps. Lying about. Covering up. Dismissing. Denying. All of those are a better fit. I have not seen much "dealing with" so far.
 
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