Dolphin
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Journal Article
Association of SARS-CoV-2 With Health-related Quality of Life 1 Year After Illness Using Latent Transition Analysis
Lauren E Wisk , Michael Gottlieb , Peizheng Chen , Huihui Yu , Kelli N O’Laughlin , Kari A Stephens , Graham Nichol , Juan Carlos C Montoy , Robert M Rodriguez , Michelle Santangelo , Kristyn Gatling , Erica S Spatz , Arjun K Venkatesh , Kristin L Rising , Mandy J Hill , Ryan Huebinger , Ahamed H Idris , Michael Willis , Efrat Kean , Samuel A McDonald , Joann G Elmore , Robert A Weinstein for the INSPIRE GroupAuthor Notes
Open Forum Infectious Diseases, Volume 12, Issue 6, June 2025, ofaf278, https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofaf278
Published:
10 June 2025
Abstract
BackgroundLong-term sequelae after SARS-CoV-2 infection may impact health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL), yet it is unknown how HRQoL changes during recovery. We compared patient-reported HRQoL among adults with COVID-19–like illness who tested SARS-CoV-2 positive (COVID+) with those who tested negative (COVID−).
Methods
Participants in this prospective, multicenter, longitudinal registry study were enrolled from December 2020 through August 2022 and completed 3-month follow-up assessments until 12 months after enrollment. Participants were adults (≥18 years) with acute symptoms suggestive of COVID-19 who received a Food and Drug Administration–approved SARS-CoV-2 test. Participants received questions from PROMIS-29 (subscales: physical function, anxiety, depression, fatigue, social participation, sleep disturbance, and pain interference) and PROMIS SF-8a (cognitive function). Latent transition analysis was used to identify meaningful patterns in HRQoL scores over time; 4 HRQoL categories were compared descriptively and using multivariable regression. Inverse probability weighting was used to adjust for covariate imbalance.
Results
There were 1096 (75%) COVID+ and 371 (25%) COVID−. Four distinct well-being classes emerged: optimal overall, poor mental, poor physical, and poor overall HRQoL. COVID+ participants were more likely to return to the optimal HRQoL class compared to COVID− participants. The most substantial transition from poor physical to optimal HRQoL occurred by 3 months, whereas movement from poor mental to optimal HRQoL occurred by 9 months.
Conclusions
In adults with COVID-19–like illness, COVID+ participants demonstrated meaningful recovery in their physical HRQoL by 3 months after infection, but mental HRQoL took longer to improve. Suboptimal HRQoL at 3 to 12 months after infection remained in approximately 20%.
Trial Registration
NCT04610515.
COVID-19, health-related quality of life, prospective cohort study, SARS-CoV-2