Back to Search Start Over

Persistence of long-term COVID-19 sequelae in patients with cancer: An analysis from the OnCovid registry

Authors :
Alessio Cortellini
Ramon Salazar
Alessandra Gennari
Juan Aguilar-Company
Mark Bower
Alexia Bertuzzi
Joan Brunet
Matteo Lambertini
Clara Maluquer
Paolo Pedrazzoli
Alvin JX. Lee
MCarmen Carmona-García
Thomas Newsom-Davis
Mieke Van Hemelrijck
Andrea Plaja
Alberto Zambelli
Carlo Tondini
Daniele Generali
Rossella Bertulli
Nikolaos Diamantis
Uma Mukherjee
Gianpiero Rizzo
Tamara Yu
Federica Zoratto
Riccardo Bruna
Anna Sureda
Clara Martinez-Vila
Luca Cantini
Francesca Mazzoni
Federica Grosso
Alessandro Parisi
Maristella Saponara
Aleix Prat
David J. Pinato
Pulmonary Medicine
Source :
European Journal of Cancer, 170, 10-16. Elsevier Ltd.
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction: A significant proportion of patients with cancer who recover from Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) may experience COVID-19 sequelae in the early post-infection phase, which negatively affect their continuity of care and oncological outcome. The long-term prevalence and clinical impact of the post-COVID-19 syndrome in patients with cancer are largely unknown. Methods: In this study, we describe the time course of COVID-19 sequelae in patients with non-advanced cancers enrolled in the OnCovid registry. Results: Overall, 186 patients were included, with a median observation period of 9.9 months (95%CI:8,8–11.3) post-COVID-19 resolution. After a median interval of 2.3 months post-COVID-19 (interquartile range: 1.4–3.7), 31 patients (16.6%) reported ≥1 sequelae, including respiratory complications (14, 7.6%), fatigue (13, 7.1%), neuro-cognitive sequelae (7, 3.8%). The vast majority of the patients were not vaccinated prior to COVID-19. COVID-19-related sequelae persisted in 9.8% and 8% of patients 6 and 12 months after COVID-19 resolution. Persistence of sequelae at first oncological follow-up was associated with history of complicated COVID-19 (45.2% vs 24.8%, p = 0.0223), irrespective of oncological features at COVID-19 diagnosis. Conclusion: This study confirms for the first time that, in a largely unvaccinated population, post-COVID-19 syndrome can affect a significant proportion of patients with non-advanced cancer who recovered from the acute illness. COVID-19 sequelae may persist up to 12 months in some patients, highlighting the need for dedicated prevention and supportive strategies.

Details

ISSN :
09598049
Volume :
170
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....36a414a8b5248b35ec393adedb5c886f