Symptom profile, case and symptom clustering, clinical and demographic characteristics of a multicentre cohort of 1297 patients evaluated for Long-COVID.

IF 7 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL BMC Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-14 DOI:10.1186/s12916-024-03746-9
Marco Floridia, Marina Giuliano, Liliana Elena Weimer, Maria Rosa Ciardi, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Paolo Palange, Patrizia Rovere Querini, Silvia Zucco, Matteo Tosato, Aldo Lo Forte, Paolo Bonfanti, Donato Lacedonia, Emanuela Barisione, Stefano Figliozzi, Paola Andreozzi, Cecilia Damiano, Flavia Pricci, Graziano Onder
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Abstract

Background: Long-COVID symptoms remain incompletely defined due to a large heterogeneity in the populations studied, case definitions, and settings of care. The aim of this study was to assess, in patients accessing care for Long-COVID, the profile of symptoms reported, the possible clustering of symptoms and cases, the functional status compared to pre-infection, and the impact on working activity.

Methods: Multicentre cohort study with a collection of both retrospective and prospective data. Demographics, comorbidities, severity and timing of acute COVID, subjective functional status, working activity and presence of 30 different symptoms were collected using a shortened version of the WHO Post COVID-19 Case Report Form. The impact on working activity was assessed in multivariable logistic regression models. Clustering of symptoms was analysed by hierarchical clustering and the clustering of cases by two-step automatic clustering.

Results: The study evaluated 1297 individuals (51.5% women) from 30 clinical centres. Men and women had different profiles in terms of comorbidities, vaccination status, severity and timing of acute SARS-CoV-2 infection. Fatigue (55.9%) and dyspnea (47.2%) were the most frequent symptoms. Women reported more symptoms (3.6 vs. 3.1, p < 0.001), with a significantly higher prevalence of memory loss, difficult concentration, cough, palpitation or tachycardia, dermatological abnormalities, brain fog, headache and visual disturbances. Dyspnea was more common in men. In the cluster analysis of the 19 more common symptoms, five aggregations were found: four two-symptom clusters (smell and taste reduction; anxiety and depressed mood; joint pain or swelling and muscle pain; difficult concentration and memory loss) and one six-symptom cluster (brain fog, equilibrium/gait disturbances, headache, paresthesia, thoracic pain, and palpitations/tachycardia). In a multivariable analysis, headache, dyspnea, difficult concentration, disturbances of equilibrium or gait, visual disturbances and muscular pain were associated with reduced or interrupted working activity. Clustering of cases defined two clusters, with distinct characteristics in terms of phase and severity of acute infection, age, sex, number of comorbidities and symptom profile.

Conclusions: The findings provide further evidence that Long-COVID is a heterogeneous disease with manifestations that differ by sex, phase of the pandemic and severity of acute disease, and support the possibility that multiple pathways lead to different clinical manifestations.

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1297 名接受 Long-COVID 评估的多中心队列患者的症状概况、病例和症状分组、临床和人口统计学特征。
背景:由于所研究的人群、病例定义和治疗环境存在很大差异,长期慢性阻塞性肺病症状的定义仍不完整。本研究的目的是评估因长期慢性阻塞性肺病接受治疗的患者所报告的症状概况、症状和病例的可能聚集、与感染前相比的功能状态以及对工作活动的影响:方法:多中心队列研究,收集回顾性和前瞻性数据。研究采用世界卫生组织《COVID-19 后病例报告表》的缩写版,收集了患者的人口统计学特征、合并症、急性 COVID 的严重程度和发生时间、主观功能状态、工作活动以及是否出现 30 种不同症状。在多变量逻辑回归模型中评估了对工作活动的影响。通过分层聚类对症状进行聚类分析,通过两步自动聚类对病例进行聚类分析:研究对来自 30 个临床中心的 1297 名患者(51.5% 为女性)进行了评估。男性和女性在合并症、疫苗接种情况、急性 SARS-CoV-2 感染的严重程度和时间方面有不同的特征。疲劳(55.9%)和呼吸困难(47.2%)是最常见的症状。女性报告的症状较多(3.6 对 3.1,P 结论:女性报告的症状较多,而男性报告的症状较少:研究结果进一步证明,长COVID是一种异质性疾病,其表现因性别、大流行阶段和急性病严重程度而异,并支持多种途径导致不同临床表现的可能性。
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来源期刊
BMC Medicine
BMC Medicine 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
13.10
自引率
1.10%
发文量
435
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Medicine is an open access, transparent peer-reviewed general medical journal. It is the flagship journal of the BMC series and publishes outstanding and influential research in various areas including clinical practice, translational medicine, medical and health advances, public health, global health, policy, and general topics of interest to the biomedical and sociomedical professional communities. In addition to research articles, the journal also publishes stimulating debates, reviews, unique forum articles, and concise tutorials. All articles published in BMC Medicine are included in various databases such as Biological Abstracts, BIOSIS, CAS, Citebase, Current contents, DOAJ, Embase, MEDLINE, PubMed, Science Citation Index Expanded, OAIster, SCImago, Scopus, SOCOLAR, and Zetoc.
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