Risk of long covid in patients with pre-existing chronic respiratory diseases: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 RESPIRATORY SYSTEM BMJ Open Respiratory Research Pub Date : 2025-01-30 DOI:10.1136/bmjresp-2024-002528
Paul Terry, R Eric Heidel, Alexandria Q Wilson, Rajiv Dhand
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Abstract

Background: An estimated 10-30% of people with COVID-19 experience debilitating long-term symptoms or long covid. Underlying health conditions associated with chronic inflammation may increase the risk of long covid.

Methods: We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to examine whether long covid risk was altered by pre-existing asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in adults. We identified studies by searching the PubMed and Embase databases from inception to 13 September 2024. We excluded studies that focused on children or defined long covid only in terms of respiratory symptoms. We used random-effects, restricted maximum likelihood models to analyse data pooled from 51 studies, which included 43 analyses of asthma and 30 analyses of COPD. The risk of bias was assessed using a ROBINS-E table.

Results: We found 41% increased odds of long covid with pre-existing asthma (95% CI 1.29 to 1.54); pre-existing COPD was associated with 32% increased odds (95% CI 1.16 to 1.51). Pre-existing asthma, but not COPD, was associated with increased odds of long covid-associated fatigue. We observed heterogeneity in the results of studies of asthma related to hospitalisation status. Potential confounding and inconsistent measurement of exposure and outcome variables were among the identified limitations.

Conclusions: Our findings support the hypothesis that pre-existing asthma and COPD increase the risk of long covid, including chronic fatigue outcomes in patients with asthma. Because COVID-19 targets the respiratory tract, these inflammatory conditions of the lower respiratory tract could provide mechanistic clues to a common pathway for the development of long-term sequelae in patients with long covid.

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已有慢性呼吸道疾病患者的长covid风险:系统综述和荟萃分析
背景:估计有10-30%的covid -19患者会出现衰弱的长期症状或长期covid。与慢性炎症相关的潜在健康状况可能会增加长期covid的风险。方法:我们进行了一项系统综述和荟萃分析,以检查成人中已有的哮喘或慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)是否会改变长期covid风险。我们通过检索PubMed和Embase数据库从成立到2024年9月13日的研究。我们排除了关注儿童或仅根据呼吸道症状定义长covid的研究。我们使用随机效应、限制最大似然模型来分析51项研究的汇总数据,其中包括43项哮喘分析和30项COPD分析。采用ROBINS-E表评估偏倚风险。结果:我们发现长冠肺炎合并既往哮喘的几率增加41% (95% CI 1.29至1.54);既往存在COPD的风险增加32% (95% CI 1.16 - 1.51)。先前存在的哮喘,而不是COPD,与长期与新冠病毒相关的疲劳的几率增加有关。我们观察到哮喘与住院状态相关的研究结果存在异质性。潜在的混淆和不一致的测量暴露和结果变量是确定的局限性。结论:我们的研究结果支持了先前存在的哮喘和COPD会增加长期covid风险的假设,包括哮喘患者的慢性疲劳结果。由于covid -19以呼吸道为靶点,这些下呼吸道炎症状况可能为长期covid -19患者长期后遗症发展的共同途径提供机制线索。
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来源期刊
BMJ Open Respiratory Research
BMJ Open Respiratory Research RESPIRATORY SYSTEM-
CiteScore
6.60
自引率
2.40%
发文量
95
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: BMJ Open Respiratory Research is a peer-reviewed, open access journal publishing respiratory and critical care medicine. It is the sister journal to Thorax and co-owned by the British Thoracic Society and BMJ. The journal focuses on robustness of methodology and scientific rigour with less emphasis on novelty or perceived impact. BMJ Open Respiratory Research operates a rapid review process, with continuous publication online, ensuring timely, up-to-date research is available worldwide. The journal publishes review articles and all research study types: Basic science including laboratory based experiments and animal models, Pilot studies or proof of concept, Observational studies, Study protocols, Registries, Clinical trials from phase I to multicentre randomised clinical trials, Systematic reviews and meta-analyses.
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