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Characterizing Long COVID in Children and Adolescents.

Authors :
Gross RS
Thaweethai T
Kleinman LC
Snowden JN
Rosenzweig EB
Milner JD
Tantisira KG
Rhee KE
Jernigan TL
Kinser PA
Salisbury AL
Warburton D
Mohandas S
Wood JC
Newburger JW
Truong DT
Flaherman VJ
Metz TD
Karlson EW
Chibnik LB
Pant DB
Krishnamoorthy A
Gallagher R
Lamendola-Essel MF
Hasson DC
Katz SD
Yin S
Dreyer BP
Carmilani M
Coombs K
Fitzgerald ML
Güthe N
Hornig M
Letts RJ
Peddie AK
Taylor BD
Balaraman V
Bogie A
Bukulmez H
Dozor AJ
Eckrich D
Elliott AJ
Evans DN
Farkas JS
Faustino EVS
Fischer L
Gaur S
Harahsheh AS
Hasan UN
Hsia DS
Huerta-Montañez G
Hummel KD
Kadish MP
Kaelber DC
Krishnan S
Kosut JS
Larrabee J
Lim PPC
Michelow IC
Oliveira CR
Raissy H
Rosario-Pabon Z
Ross JL
Sato AI
Stevenson MD
Talavera-Barber MM
Teufel RJ
Weakley KE
Zimmerman E
Bind MC
Chan J
Guan Z
Morse RE
Reeder HT
Akshoomoff N
Aschner JL
Bhattacharjee R
Cottrell LA
Cowan K
D'Sa VA
Fiks AG
Gennaro ML
Irby K
Khare M
Guttierrez JL
McCulloh RJ
Narang S
Ness-Cochinwala M
Nolan S
Palumbo P
Ryu J
Salazar JC
Selvarangan R
Stein CR
Werzberger A
Zempsky WT
Aupperle R
Baker FC
Banich MT
Barch DM
Baskin-Sommers A
Bjork JM
Bookheimer SY
Brown SA
Casey BJ
Chang L
Clark DB
Dale AM
Dapretto M
Ernst TM
Fair DA
Feldstein Ewing SW
Foxe JJ
Freedman EG
Friedman NP
Garavan H
Gee DG
Gonzalez R
Gray KM
Heitzeg MM
Herting MM
Jacobus J
Laird AR
Larson CL
Lisdahl KM
Luciana M
Luna B
Madden PAF
McGlade EC
Müller-Oehring EM
Nagel BJ
Neale MC
Paulus MP
Potter AS
Renshaw PF
Sowell ER
Squeglia LM
Tapert S
Uddin LQ
Wilson S
Yurgelun-Todd DA
Foulkes AS
Stockwell MS
Source :
JAMA [JAMA] 2024 Aug 21. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 Aug 21.
Publication Year :
2024
Publisher :
Ahead of Print

Abstract

Importance: Most research to understand postacute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), or long COVID, has focused on adults, with less known about this complex condition in children. Research is needed to characterize pediatric PASC to enable studies of underlying mechanisms that will guide future treatment.<br />Objective: To identify the most common prolonged symptoms experienced by children (aged 6 to 17 years) after SARS-CoV-2 infection, how these symptoms differ by age (school-age [6-11 years] vs adolescents [12-17 years]), how they cluster into distinct phenotypes, and what symptoms in combination could be used as an empirically derived index to assist researchers to study the likely presence of PASC.<br />Design, Setting, and Participants: Multicenter longitudinal observational cohort study with participants recruited from more than 60 US health care and community settings between March 2022 and December 2023, including school-age children and adolescents with and without SARS-CoV-2 infection history.<br />Exposure: SARS-CoV-2 infection.<br />Main Outcomes and Measures: PASC and 89 prolonged symptoms across 9 symptom domains.<br />Results: A total of 898 school-age children (751 with previous SARS-CoV-2 infection [referred to as infected] and 147 without [referred to as uninfected]; mean age, 8.6 years; 49% female; 11% were Black or African American, 34% were Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish, and 60% were White) and 4469 adolescents (3109 infected and 1360 uninfected; mean age, 14.8 years; 48% female; 13% were Black or African American, 21% were Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish, and 73% were White) were included. Median time between first infection and symptom survey was 506 days for school-age children and 556 days for adolescents. In models adjusted for sex and race and ethnicity, 14 symptoms in both school-age children and adolescents were more common in those with SARS-CoV-2 infection history compared with those without infection history, with 4 additional symptoms in school-age children only and 3 in adolescents only. These symptoms affected almost every organ system. Combinations of symptoms most associated with infection history were identified to form a PASC research index for each age group; these indices correlated with poorer overall health and quality of life. The index emphasizes neurocognitive, pain, and gastrointestinal symptoms in school-age children but change or loss in smell or taste, pain, and fatigue/malaise-related symptoms in adolescents. Clustering analyses identified 4 PASC symptom phenotypes in school-age children and 3 in adolescents.<br />Conclusions and Relevance: This study developed research indices for characterizing PASC in children and adolescents. Symptom patterns were similar but distinguishable between the 2 groups, highlighting the importance of characterizing PASC separately for these age ranges.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1538-3598
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
JAMA
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
39196964
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.2024.12747