One-year trajectories of physical and mental health-related quality of life, fatigue and dyspnoea in COVID-19 survivors.

IF 3.3 3区 医学 Q1 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Quality of Life Research Pub Date : 2024-10-19 DOI:10.1007/s11136-024-03812-y
Gerko Schaap, John F Davelaar, Peter M Ten Klooster, Carine J M Doggen, Job van der Palen, Christina Bode, Harald E Vonkeman
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Abstract

Purpose: A substantial number of people experience a persisting impact on health-related quality of life (HRQoL) after COVID-19. The current study aims to identify different trajectories of physical and mental HRQoL, fatigue severity, and dyspnoea severity following hospitalisation with COVID-19, and associated factors of these trajectories.

Methods: 500 patients with COVID-19 were followed for one year in a longitudinal cohort study. Self-reported outcomes were measured at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after hospitalisation. Distinct trajectories were characterised using Growth Mixture Modelling. Sociodemographic and clinical correlates of trajectories were investigated using multivariable (multinomial) logistic regression analyses.

Results: Three trajectories ('stable high' (16%), 'improving' (40%), and 'stable low' (44%)) were found for physical HRQoL, and four ('stable high' (43%), 'improving' (14%), 'middle declining' (17%), and 'low' (26%)) for mental HRQoL. Older age, overweight and obesity, lower education, and comorbidities were associated with 'low' physical HRQoL. Younger age was associated with 'low' mental HRQoL. Four fatigue trajectories ('no fatigue' (15%), 'improving' (40%), 'low-severe' (27%), and 'high-severe' (18%)) were found. Participants either experienced almost never ('no dyspnoea', 75%) or almost always ('severe', 25%) dyspnoea. High co-occurrences between low HRQoL and severe fatigue and dyspnoea symptom trajectories were found.

Conclusion: A substantial number of COVID-19 survivors continue to struggle with reduced HRQoL over time. However, large variations in these physical and mental HRQoL trajectories exist, and trajectories are associated with persisting COVID-19-related symptoms or pre-hospitalised health status. Regular measurement of HRQoL and post-COVID symptoms may help identify those that may benefit from timely interventions.

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COVID-19幸存者与身心健康相关的生活质量、疲劳和呼吸困难的一年轨迹。
目的:很多人在感染 COVID-19 后,健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)会持续受到影响。本研究旨在确定 COVID-19 患者住院后身心健康相关生活质量、疲劳严重程度和呼吸困难严重程度的不同轨迹,以及这些轨迹的相关因素。在住院后的 3、6、9 和 12 个月对自我报告的结果进行测量。采用生长混合模型对不同的轨迹进行了描述。使用多变量(多项式)逻辑回归分析研究了轨迹的社会人口学和临床相关性:结果:在身体 HRQoL 方面发现了三种轨迹("稳定偏高"(16%)、"改善"(40%)和 "稳定偏低"(44%)),在心理 HRQoL 方面发现了四种轨迹("稳定偏高"(43%)、"改善"(14%)、"中度下降"(17%)和 "偏低"(26%))。年龄较大、超重和肥胖、教育程度较低以及合并症与身体 HRQoL 的 "低 "有关。年龄较小与 "低 "心理 HRQoL 有关。研究发现了四种疲劳轨迹("无疲劳"(15%)、"有改善"(40%)、"低-严重"(27%)和 "高-严重"(18%))。参与者要么几乎从未出现过呼吸困难("无呼吸困难",75%),要么几乎总是出现呼吸困难("严重",25%)。研究发现,低 HRQoL 与严重疲劳和呼吸困难症状轨迹之间的共同发生率很高:结论:随着时间的推移,大量 COVID-19 幸存者的 HRQoL 继续下降。然而,这些身体和精神的 HRQoL 轨迹存在很大差异,而且这些轨迹与 COVID-19 相关症状的持续存在或入院前的健康状况有关。定期测量 HRQoL 和 COVID 后症状可能有助于识别那些可能受益于及时干预的患者。
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来源期刊
Quality of Life Research
Quality of Life Research 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
8.60%
发文量
224
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Quality of Life Research is an international, multidisciplinary journal devoted to the rapid communication of original research, theoretical articles and methodological reports related to the field of quality of life, in all the health sciences. The journal also offers editorials, literature, book and software reviews, correspondence and abstracts of conferences. Quality of life has become a prominent issue in biometry, philosophy, social science, clinical medicine, health services and outcomes research. The journal''s scope reflects the wide application of quality of life assessment and research in the biological and social sciences. All original work is subject to peer review for originality, scientific quality and relevance to a broad readership. This is an official journal of the International Society of Quality of Life Research.
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