1. A multisystem, cardio-renal investigation of post-COVID-19 illness
- Author
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Morrow, Andrew J., Sykes, Robert, McIntosh, Alasdair, Kamdar, Anna, Bagot, Catherine, Bayes, Hannah K., Blyth, Kevin G., Briscoe, Michael, Bulluck, Heerajnarain, Carrick, David, Church, Colin, Corcoran, David, Findlay, Iain, Gibson, Vivienne B., Gillespie, Lynsey, Grieve, Douglas, Hall Barrientos, Pauline, Ho, Antonia, Lang, Ninian N., Lennie, Vera, Lowe, David J., Macfarlane, Peter W., Mark, Patrick B., Mayne, Kaitlin J., McConnachie, Alex, McGeoch, Ross, McGinley, Christopher, McKee, Connor, Nordin, Sabrina, Payne, Alexander, Rankin, Alastair J., Robertson, Keith E., Roditi, Giles, Ryan, Nicola, Sattar, Naveed, Allwood-Spiers, Sarah, Stobo, David, Touyz, Rhian M., Veldtman, Gruschen, Watkins, Stuart, Weeden, Sarah, Weir, Robin A., Welsh, Paul, Wereski, Ryan, Mangion, Kenneth, and Berry, Colin
- Subjects
Male ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Quality of Life ,Aftercare ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Middle Aged ,Patient Discharge - Abstract
The pathophysiology and trajectory of post-Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) syndrome is uncertain. To clarify multisystem involvement, we undertook a prospective cohort study including patients who had been hospitalized with COVID-19 (ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT04403607). Serial blood biomarkers, digital electrocardiography and patient-reported outcome measures were obtained in-hospital and at 28–60 days post-discharge when multisystem imaging using chest computed tomography with pulmonary and coronary angiography and cardio-renal magnetic resonance imaging was also obtained. Longer-term clinical outcomes were assessed using electronic health records. Compared to controls (n = 29), at 28–60 days post-discharge, people with COVID-19 (n = 159; mean age, 55 years; 43% female) had persisting evidence of cardio-renal involvement and hemostasis pathway activation. The adjudicated likelihood of myocarditis was ‘very likely’ in 21 (13%) patients, ‘probable’ in 65 (41%) patients, ‘unlikely’ in 56 (35%) patients and ‘not present’ in 17 (11%) patients. At 28–60 days post-discharge, COVID-19 was associated with worse health-related quality of life (EQ-5D-5L score 0.77 (0.23) versus 0.87 (0.20)), anxiety and depression (PHQ-4 total score 3.59 (3.71) versus 1.28 (2.67)) and aerobic exercise capacity reflected by predicted maximal oxygen utilization (20.0 (7.6) versus 29.5 (8.0) ml/kg/min) (all P
- Published
- 2022