6-month consequences of COVID-19 in patients discharged from hospital: a cohort study
Zotero / K4D COVID-19 Health Evidence Summaries Group / Top-Level Items 2021-01-17
Type
Journal Article
Author
Chaolin Huang
Author
Lixue Huang
Author
Yeming Wang
Author
Xia Li
Author
Lili Ren
Author
Xiaoying Gu
Author
Liang Kang
Author
Li Guo
Author
Min Liu
Author
Xing Zhou
Author
Jianfeng Luo
Author
Zhenghui Huang
Author
Shengjin Tu
Author
Yue Zhao
Author
Li Chen
Author
Decui Xu
Author
Yanping Li
Author
Caihong Li
Author
Lu Peng
Author
Yong Li
Author
Wuxiang Xie
Author
Dan Cui
Author
Lianhan Shang
Author
Guohui Fan
Author
Jiuyang Xu
Author
Geng Wang
Author
Ying Wang
Author
Jingchuan Zhong
Author
Chen Wang
Author
Jianwei Wang
Author
Dingyu Zhang
Author
Bin Cao
URL
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(20)32656-8/abstract
Volume
397
Issue
10270
Pages
220-232
Publication
The Lancet
ISSN
0140-6736, 1474-547X
Date
08/01/2021
Extra
Publisher: Elsevier
PMID: 33428867
Journal Abbr
The Lancet
DOI
10.1016/S0140-6736(20)32656-8
Library Catalog
www.thelancet.com
Language
English
Abstract
Summary
Background
The long-term health consequences of COVID-19 remain largely unclear. The aim of this study was to describe the long-term health consequences of patients with COVID-19 who have been discharged from hospital and investigate the associated risk factors, in particular disease severity.
Methods
We did an ambidirectional cohort study of patients with confirmed COVID-19 who had been discharged from Jin Yin-tan Hospital (Wuhan, China) between Jan 7, 2020, and May 29, 2020. Patients who died before follow-up, patients for whom follow-up would be difficult because of psychotic disorders, dementia, or re-admission to hospital, those who were unable to move freely due to concomitant osteoarthropathy or immobile before or after discharge due to diseases such as stroke or pulmonary embolism, those who declined to participate, those who could not be contacted, and those living outside of Wuhan or in nursing or welfare homes were all excluded. All patients were interviewed with a series of questionnaires for evaluation of symptoms and health-related quality of life, underwent physical examinations and a 6-min walking test, and received blood tests. A stratified sampling procedure was used to sample patients according to their highest seven-category scale during their hospital stay as 3, 4, and 5–6, to receive pulmonary function test, high resolution CT of the chest, and ultrasonography. Enrolled patients who had participated in the Lopinavir Trial for Suppression of SARS-CoV-2 in China received severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 antibody tests. Multivariable adjusted linear or logistic regression models were used to evaluate the association between disease severity and long-term health consequences.
Findings
In total, 1733 of 2469 discharged patients with COVID-19 were enrolled after 736 were excluded. Patients had a median age of 57·0 (IQR 47·0–65·0) years and 897 (52%) were men. The follow-up study was done from June 16, to Sept 3, 2020, and the median follow-up time after symptom onset was 186·0 (175·0–199·0) days. Fatigue or muscle weakness (63%, 1038 of 1655) and sleep difficulties (26%, 437 of 1655) were the most common symptoms. Anxiety or depression was reported among 23% (367 of 1617) of patients. The proportions of median 6-min walking distance less than the lower limit of the normal range were 24% for those at severity scale 3, 22% for severity scale 4, and 29% for severity scale 5–6. The corresponding proportions of patients with diffusion impairment were 22% for severity scale 3, 29% for scale 4, and 56% for scale 5–6, and median CT scores were 3·0 (IQR 2·0–5·0) for severity scale 3, 4·0 (3·0–5·0) for scale 4, and 5·0 (4·0–6·0) for scale 5–6. After multivariable adjustment, patients showed an odds ratio (OR) 1·61 (95% CI 0·80–3·25) for scale 4 versus scale 3 and 4·60 (1·85–11·48) for scale 5–6 versus scale 3 for diffusion impairment; OR 0·88 (0·66–1·17) for scale 4 versus scale 3 and OR 1·77 (1·05–2·97) for scale 5–6 versus scale 3 for anxiety or depression, and OR 0·74 (0·58–0·96) for scale 4 versus scale 3 and 2·69 (1·46–4·96) for scale 5–6 versus scale 3 for fatigue or muscle weakness. Of 94 patients with blood antibodies tested at follow-up, the seropositivity (96·2% vs 58·5%) and median titres (19·0 vs 10·0) of the neutralising antibodies were significantly lower compared with at the acute phase. 107 of 822 participants without acute kidney injury and with estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) 90 mL/min per 1·73 m2 or more at acute phase had eGFR less than 90 mL/min per 1·73 m2 at follow-up.
Interpretation
At 6 months after acute infection, COVID-19 survivors were mainly troubled with fatigue or muscle weakness, sleep difficulties, and anxiety or depression. Patients who were more severely ill during their hospital stay had more severe impaired pulmonary diffusion capacities and abnormal chest imaging manifestations, and are the main target population for intervention of long-term recovery.
Short Title
6-month consequences of COVID-19 in patients discharged from hospital