HealthDay News — Organ impairment persists in 59% of individuals 1 year after COVID-19, according to a study published online Feb. 14 in Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine.
Andrea Dennis, Ph.D., from Perspectum in Oxford, England, and colleagues conducted a prospective cohort study to examine the prevalence of organ impairment in patients with long COVID at six and 12 months after initial symptoms. A total of 536 individuals completed baseline assessment at a median of six months post-COVID-19; 331 (62 percent) with organ impairment or incidental findings had follow-up.
The researchers found that participants had reduced symptom burden at follow-up, with a median of 10 and three symptoms at 6 and 12 months, respectively. At 6 and 12 months, extreme breathlessness (38 and 30 percent), cognitive dysfunction (48 and 38 percent), and poor health-related quality of life (EQ-5D-5L <0.7: 57 and 45 percent) were common; these symptoms were associated with female gender, younger age, and single-organ impairment. Overall, 69 and 23 percent had single- and multi-organ impairment at baseline, respectively, which persisted in 59 and 27 percent at follow-up.
“Organ impairment in long COVID has implications for symptoms, quality of life and longer-term health, signaling the need for prevention and integrated care for long COVID patients,” a coauthor said in a statement.
Several authors are employees of Perspectum. One author disclosed financial ties to AstraZeneca.