BMJ Open (Mar 2024)

Subphenotypes of self-reported symptoms and outcomes in long COVID: a prospective cohort study with latent class analysis

  • Alison Morris,
  • Barbara Methe,
  • Xiaohong Wang,
  • Georgios D Kitsios,
  • Frank C Sciurba,
  • Eva Szigethy,
  • Lili Jiang,
  • Shawna Blacka,
  • Jana J Jacobs,
  • Taaha Mirza,
  • Asma Naqvi,
  • Heather Gentry,
  • Cathy Murray,
  • Konstantin Golubykh,
  • Hafiz Qurashi,
  • Akash Dodia,
  • Michael Risbano,
  • Michael Benigno,
  • Birol Emir,
  • Edward Weinstein,
  • Candace Bramson,
  • Feng Dai,
  • John W Mellors,
  • Seyed Mehdi Nouraie

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-077869
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3

Abstract

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Objective To characterise subphenotypes of self-reported symptoms and outcomes (SRSOs) in postacute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC).Design Prospective, observational cohort study of subjects with PASC.Setting Academic tertiary centre from five clinical referral sources.Participants Adults with COVID-19 ≥20 days before enrolment and presence of any new self-reported symptoms following COVID-19.Exposures We collected data on clinical variables and SRSOs via structured telephone interviews and performed standardised assessments with validated clinical numerical scales to capture psychological symptoms, neurocognitive functioning and cardiopulmonary function. We collected saliva and stool samples for quantification of SARS-CoV-2 RNA via quantitative PCR.Outcomes measures Description of PASC SRSOs burden and duration, derivation of distinct PASC subphenotypes via latent class analysis (LCA) and relationship with viral load.Results We analysed baseline data for 214 individuals with a study visit at a median of 197.5 days after COVID-19 diagnosis. Participants reported ever having a median of 9/16 symptoms (IQR 6–11) after acute COVID-19, with muscle-aches, dyspnoea and headache being the most common. Fatigue, cognitive impairment and dyspnoea were experienced for a longer time. Participants had a lower burden of active symptoms (median 3 (1–6)) than those ever experienced (p<0.001). Unsupervised LCA of symptoms revealed three clinically active PASC subphenotypes: a high burden constitutional symptoms (21.9%), a persistent loss/change of smell and taste (20.6%) and a minimal residual symptoms subphenotype (57.5%). Subphenotype assignments were strongly associated with self-assessments of global health, recovery and PASC impact on employment (p<0.001) as well as referral source for enrolment. Viral persistence (5.6% saliva and 1% stool samples positive) did not explain SRSOs or subphenotypes.Conclusions We identified three distinct PASC subphenotypes. We highlight that although most symptoms progressively resolve, specific PASC subpopulations are impacted by either high burden of constitutional symptoms or persistent olfactory/gustatory dysfunction, requiring prospective identification and targeted preventive or therapeutic interventions.