Scientific Reports (Feb 2023)

Pulmonary recovery from COVID-19 in patients with metabolic diseases: a longitudinal prospective cohort study

  • Thomas Sonnweber,
  • Philipp Grubwieser,
  • Alex Pizzini,
  • Anna Boehm,
  • Sabina Sahanic,
  • Anna Luger,
  • Christoph Schwabl,
  • Gerlig Widmann,
  • Alexander Egger,
  • Gregor Hoermann,
  • Ewald Wöll,
  • Bernhard Puchner,
  • Susanne Kaser,
  • Igor Theurl,
  • Manfred Nairz,
  • Piotr Tymoszuk,
  • Günter Weiss,
  • Michael Joannidis,
  • Judith Löffler-Ragg,
  • Ivan Tancevski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-29654-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Abstract The severity of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is related to the presence of comorbidities including metabolic diseases. We herein present data from the longitudinal prospective CovILD trial, and investigate the recovery from COVID-19 in individuals with dysglycemia and dyslipidemia. A total of 145 COVID-19 patients were prospectively followed and a comprehensive clinical, laboratory and imaging assessment was performed at 60, 100, 180, and 360 days after the onset of COVID-19. The severity of acute COVID-19 and outcome at early post-acute follow-up were significantly related to the presence of dysglycemia and dyslipidemia. Still, at long-term follow-up, metabolic disorders were not associated with an adverse pulmonary outcome, as reflected by a good recovery of structural lung abnormalities in both, patients with and without metabolic diseases. To conclude, dyslipidemia and dysglycemia are associated with a more severe course of acute COVID-19 as well as delayed early recovery but do not impair long-term pulmonary recovery.