Persistent symptoms and clinical findings in adults with post-acute sequelae of COVID-19/post-COVID-19 syndrome in the second year....[], 2025, Peter

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by InitialConditions, Jan 23, 2025 at 7:27 PM.

  1. InitialConditions

    InitialConditions Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    Abstract
    Background
    Self-reported health problems following severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection are common and often include relatively non-specific complaints such as fatigue, exertional dyspnoea, concentration or memory disturbance and sleep problems. The long-term prognosis of such post-acute sequelae of COVID-19/post-COVID-19 syndrome (PCS) is unknown, and data finding and correlating organ dysfunction and pathology with self-reported symptoms in patients with non-recovery from PCS is scarce. We wanted to describe clinical characteristics and diagnostic findings among patients with PCS persisting for >1 year and assessed risk factors for PCS persistence versus improvement.

    Methods and findings
    This nested population-based case-control study included subjects with PCS aged 18–65 years with (n = 982) and age- and sex-matched control subjects without PCS (n = 576) according to an earlier population-based questionnaire study (6–12 months after acute infection, phase 1) consenting to provide follow-up information and to undergo comprehensive outpatient assessment, including neurocognitive, cardiopulmonary exercise, and laboratory testing in four university health centres in southwestern Germany (phase 2, another 8.5 months [median, range 3–14 months] after phase 1). The mean age of the participants was 48 years, and 65% were female.

    At phase 2, 67.6% of the patients with PCS at phase 1 developed persistent PCS, whereas 78.5% of the recovered participants remained free of health problems related to PCS.

    Improvement among patients with earlier PCS was associated with mild acute index infection, previous full-time employment, educational status, and no specialist consultation and not attending a rehabilitation programme. The development of new symptoms related to PCS among participants initially recovered was associated with an intercurrent secondary SARS-CoV-2 infection and educational status.

    Patients with persistent PCS were less frequently never smokers (61.2% versus 75.7%), more often obese (30.2% versus 12.4%) with higher mean values for body mass index (BMI) and body fat, and had lower educational status (university entrance qualification 38.7% versus 61.5%) than participants with continued recovery. Fatigue/exhaustion, neurocognitive disturbance, chest symptoms/breathlessness and anxiety/depression/sleep problems remained the predominant symptom clusters.

    Exercise intolerance with post-exertional malaise (PEM) for >14 h and symptoms compatible with myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome were reported by 35.6% and 11.6% of participants with persistent PCS patients, respectively.

    In analyses adjusted for sex-age class combinations, study centre and university entrance qualification, significant differences between participants with persistent PCS versus those with continued recovery were observed for performance in three different neurocognitive tests, scores for perceived stress, subjective cognitive disturbances, dysautonomia, depression and anxiety, sleep quality, fatigue and quality of life. In persistent PCS, handgrip strength (40.2 [95% confidence interval (CI) [39.4, 41.1]] versus 42.5 [95% CI [41.5, 43.6]] kg), maximal oxygen consumption (27.9 [95% CI [27.3, 28.4]] versus 31.0 [95% CI [30.3, 31.6]] ml/min/kg body weight) and ventilatory efficiency (minute ventilation/carbon dioxide production slope, 28.8 [95% CI [28.3, 29.2]] versus 27.1 [95% CI [26.6, 27.7]]) were significantly reduced relative to the control group of participants with continued recovery after adjustment for sex-age class combinations, study centre, education, BMI, smoking status and use of beta blocking agents.

    There were no differences in measures of systolic and diastolic cardiac function at rest, in the level of N-terminal brain natriuretic peptide blood levels or other laboratory measurements (including complement activity, markers of Epstein–Barr virus [EBV] reactivation, inflammatory and coagulation markers, serum levels of cortisol, adrenocorticotropic hormone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate).

    Screening for viral persistence (PCR in stool samples and SARS-CoV-2 spike antigen levels in plasma) in a subgroup of the patients with persistent PCS was negative.

    Sensitivity analyses (pre-existing illness/comorbidity, obesity, medical care of the index acute infection) revealed similar findings. Patients with persistent PCS and PEM reported more pain symptoms and had worse results in almost all tests. A limitation was that we had no objective information on exercise capacity and cognition before acute infection. In addition, we did not include patients unable to attend the outpatient clinic for whatever reason including severe illness, immobility or social deprivation or exclusion.

    Conclusions
    In this study, we observed that the majority of working age patients with PCS did not recover in the second year of their illness. Patterns of reported symptoms remained essentially similar, non-specific and dominated by fatigue, exercise intolerance and cognitive complaints. Despite objective signs of cognitive deficits and reduced exercise capacity, there was no major pathology in laboratory investigations, and our findings do not support viral persistence, EBV reactivation, adrenal insufficiency or increased complement turnover as pathophysiologically relevant for persistent PCS. A history of PEM was associated with more severe symptoms and more objective signs of disease and might help stratify cases for disease severity.

    Link: https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1004511
     
    Last edited by a moderator: Jan 24, 2025 at 2:51 AM
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  2. Kalliope

    Kalliope Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    :(
     
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  3. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    There's some interesting results reported there that make this paper worth a closer look. It has a good sample size (982 PCS and 576 age and sex matched controls.

    Recovery - not great
    6-12 months to be observed as having PCS, then a 3 to 14 month followup period, at the end of which recovery was assessed.



    Factors associated with improvement - includes not attending a rehabilitation programme or having a specialist consultation
    Obviously there may be some interaction of factors there - people who are improving or whose symptoms are less severe may be less likely to seek out a rehabilitation programme or see a specialist. But, still.



    Factors associated with persistence of PCS at followup: Interestingly, no mention of sex or age.


    People are getting PCS on subsequent infections


    Symptoms - PEM was assessed. Symptoms compatible with ME/CFS in 11.6% of people with persistent PCS

    No differences in cortisol levels!! Nor ACTH. Will be interesting to see what they measured for complement activity and inflammatory and coagulation markers.
     
    Last edited: Jan 24, 2025 at 2:56 AM
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  4. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    Germany's obesity rate is about 20%, so having the PCS/non-PCS group split between 30% and 12% are again suggesting people with lower socioeconomic status have more diagnoses (and they would likely have more physically stressfull jobs with less possibilities to avoid PEM).

    On reverse causality and rehab @Hutan, I'm not so sure it's necessarily so that it's the "worst" patients that end up in rehab. I mean at least here in Norway it is suggested to get into rehab as soon as possible to avoid getting "stuck" in the illness. I don't think it would necessarily be different in Germany?
     
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  5. Hutan

    Hutan Moderator Staff Member

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    It could be. It might depend on the availability of clinics. In Australia, when my son was saying that he planned to go back to school the next year, he was assessed as not needing to be referred to the rehabilitation programme. The programme seemed to be reserved for young people who were missing school.

    But, in any case, the finding that not attending a rehabilitation clinic is associated with increased odds recovery is interesting.
     
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  6. Sean

    Sean Moderator Staff Member

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    And more than a little embarrassing for some.
     
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  7. Midnattsol

    Midnattsol Moderator Staff Member

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    That too. There are so many things that could influence why someone would be referred. One thing that could make the numbers worse than they are are milder patients being more able to advocate for getting treatment (but might also have read up on GET and not wanting to go that route?).

    Agreed. Glad we are starting to get numbers that the approach is simply not working.
     
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  8. Dolphin

    Dolphin Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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    https://www.eurekalert.org/news-releases/1070763

    News Release 23-Jan-2025
    Study tracks physical and cognitive impairments associated with long COVID

    Researchers following nearly 1,000 people with post-COVID-19 syndrome found few changes to their symptoms in the second year of illness

    Peer-Reviewed Publication
    PLOS


    image:

    Researchers track physical and cognitive impairments associated with long COVID in nearly 1,000 people with post-COVID-19 syndrome.

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    Credit: PIRO4D, Pixabay (CC0, https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)

    Two-thirds of people with post-COVID-19 syndrome have persistent, objective symptoms – including reduced physical exercise capacity and reduced cognitive test performances – for a year or more, with no major changes in symptom clusters during the second year of their illness, according to a new study published January 23rd in the open-access journal PLOS Medicine by Winfried Kern of Freiburg University, Germany, and colleagues.

    Self-reported health problems following SARS-CoV-2 infection have commonly been described and may persist for months. However, the long-term prognosis of post-COVID-19 syndrome (PCS) is unknown.

    In the new study, researchers studied 982 people aged 18 to 65 who had previously been identified as having PCS, as well as 576 controls. All participants visited one of several university health centers in southwestern Germany for comprehensive assessments, including neurocognitive, cardiopulmonary exercise, and laboratory testing.

    The predominant symptom clusters among people with PCS were fatigue/exhaustion, neurocognitive disturbances, chest symptoms/breathlessness, and anxiety/depression/sleep problems. Nearly 68% of people who originally reported PCS still struggled with symptoms in the second year. Exercise intolerance with post-exertional malaise was reported by 35.6% of people with persistent PCS, and these people had worse outcomes and more severe symptoms. People with lower educational attainment, obesity, or more severe illness during the initial COVID-19 infection were also at higher risk of prolonged symptoms.

    When they looked at objective measures of health and cognition, the team found that people with persistent PCS had significant reductions in handgrip strength, maximal oxygen consumption, and ventilatory efficiency. Patients with persistent PCS and post-exertional malaise scored lower than control patients on cognitive tests measuring memory, attention, and processing speed; however, the researchers point out that they had no data on cognition before acute COVID-19 infection. The team was not able to identify differences in cardiac function or laboratory values, including tests of viral persistence.

    “The results call for the inclusion of cognitive and exercise testing in the clinical evaluation and monitoring of patients with suspected PCS,” the authors say. “Observational studies with longer follow-up are urgently needed to evaluate factors for improvement and non-recovery from PCS.”

    The authors add, “Grave symptoms with mental and physical exercise dysfunction, but no laboratory markers in Long Covid/post-Covid syndrome.”



    In your coverage, please use this URL to provide access to the freely available paper in PLOS Medicine: http://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1004511

    Citation: Peter RS, Nieters A, Göpel S, Merle U, Steinacker JM, Deibert P, et al. (2025) Persistent symptoms and clinical findings in adults with post-acute sequelae of COVID-19/post-COVID-19 syndrome in the second year after acute infection: A population-based, nested case-control study. PLoS Med 22(1): e1004511. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pmed.1004511

    Author countries: Germany

    Funding: This work was funded by a Baden-Württemberg Federal State Ministry of Science and Art (https://mwk.baden-wuerttemberg.de) grant (number MR/S028188/1) to WVK, HGK, UM, DR, SG and JS. The funder had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

    Journal
    PLOS Medicine

    DOI
    10.1371/journal.pmed.1004511

    Method of Research
    Observational study

    Subject of Research
    People

    COI Statement
    Competing interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

     
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  9. Kalliope

    Kalliope Senior Member (Voting Rights)

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