The death of a loved one, financial or food insecurity, or a newly developed disability were some of the strongest predictors of whether a patient hospitalized for COVID-19 would experience symptoms of long COVID a year later, a new study finds.
Led by researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine, the study found that adult patients with such “major life stressors”—present in more than 50 percent of those followed—were at least twice as likely to struggle with depression, brain fog, fatigue, sleep problems, and other long-term COVID-19 symptoms.
, the analysis also confirmed the contribution of traditional factors to greater long COVID risk as shown by past studies—older age, disability level to start with, and a more severe initial case of COVID-19.
“Our study is unique in that it explores the impact of life stressors—along with demographic trends and neurologic events—as predictors of long-term cognitive and functional disabilities that affected quality of life in a large population,” says lead study author Jennifer A. Frontera, MD, professor in the at ٺƵ Health. “Therapies that lessen the trauma of the most stress-inducing life events need to be a central part of treatment for long COVID, with more research needed to validate the best approaches.”
The research used standard telephone survey tools in the field—the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), the Barthel Index, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (t-MoCA), and the National Institutes of Health (NIH)/Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System (PROMIS) Neurological Quality Of Life (NeuroQoL) batteries—to measure level of daily function, clear thinking (cognition), anxiety, depression, fatigue, and sleep quality. The team attempted to follow up with each of 790 patients 6 months and a year after COVID-19 hospitalization within ٺƵ Health between March 10, 2020, and May 20, 2020.
Of these surviving patients, 451 (57 percent) completed a 6-month and/or 12-month follow-up, and, of them, 17 percent died between discharge and 12-month follow-up and 51 percent reported significant life stressors at 12 months.
In analyses that compared factors against each other for their contribution to worse outcomes, life stressors including financial insecurity, food insecurity, death of a close contact, and new disability were the strongest independent predictors of prolonged COVID-19 symptoms. These same stressors also best predicted worse functional status, depression, fatigue, sleep scores, and reduced ability to participate in activities of daily living such as feeding, dressing, and bathing.
Gender was also a contributor, as past studies have found that women are more susceptible in general to, for instance, autoimmune diseases that could have an impact on outcomes. Additionally, undiagnosed mood disorders may have been unmasked by pandemic-related stressors.
Neurologic Long COVID May Include More Than One Condition
A second study led by Dr. Frontera and colleagues, and , found that patients diagnosed as having long COVID neurologic problems can be divided into three symptom groups.
Because there is no current biological definition long COVID, many studies lump disparate symptoms into what is currently a blanket diagnosis, and without an assessment of clinical relevance, says Dr. Frontera. The resulting vagueness has made it “difficult to assess treatment strategies.”
For the PLOS One study, the research team collected data on symptoms, treatments received, and outcomes for 12 months after hospitalization with COVID-19, with treatment success measured again by standard metrics (modified Rankin Scale, Barthel Index, NIH NeuroQoL). The three newly identified disease groups were as follows:
- Cluster 1: few symptoms (most commonly headache) who received few therapeutic interventions
- Cluster 2: many symptoms including anxiety and depression who received several treatments, including antidepressants to psychological therapy
- Cluster 3: primarily pulmonary symptoms such as shortness of breath; many patients also complained of headache and cognitive symptoms, and mostly received physical therapy
The most severely affected patients (symptom Cluster 2) had higher rates of disability and worse measures of anxiety, depression, fatigue, and sleep disorders. All patients whose treatment included psychiatric therapies reported symptom improvement, compared to 97 percent who received primarily physical or occupational therapy, and 83 percent who received few interventions.
The Brookings Institution estimated in August 2022 that roughly 16 million working-age Americans (aged 18 to 65) have long COVID, out of which 2 to 4 million are out of work due to long COVID.
Along with Dr. Frontera, authors of the Journal of the Neurological Sciences study from the Department of Neurology at ٺƵ Health were Sakinah B. Sabadia, Ariane Lewis, Aaron S. Lord, Kara R. Melmed, Sujata P. Thawani, Laura J. Balcer, Thomas M. Wisniewski, and Steven L. Galetta. Also authors were Dixon Yang of the Department of Neurology at NewYork-Presbyterian, Columbia Medical Center; Adam de Havenon in the Department of Neurology at Yale University School of Medicine; and Shadi Yaghi in the Department of Neurology at Brown University School of Medicine.
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