BMC Public Health (Jul 2024)

Clusters of long COVID among patients hospitalized for COVID-19 in New York City

  • Sara Venkatraman,
  • Jesus Maria Gomez Salinero,
  • Adina Scheinfeld,
  • Sean Houghton,
  • David Redmond,
  • Monika Safford,
  • Mangala Rajan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-19379-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recent studies have demonstrated that individuals hospitalized due to COVID-19 can be affected by “long-COVID” symptoms for as long as one year after discharge. Objectives Our study objective is to identify data-driven clusters of patients using a novel, unsupervised machine learning technique. Methods The study uses data from 437 patients hospitalized in New York City between March 3rd and May 15th of 2020. The data used was abstracted from medical records and collected from a follow-up survey for up to one-year post-hospitalization. Hospitalization data included demographics, comorbidities, and in-hospital complications. The survey collected long-COVID symptoms, and information on general health, social isolation, and loneliness. To perform the analysis, we created a graph by projecting the data onto eight principal components (PCs) and running the K-nearest neighbors algorithm. We then used Louvain’s algorithm to partition this graph into non-overlapping clusters. Results The cluster analysis produced four clusters with distinct health and social connectivity patterns. The first cluster (n = 141) consisted of patients with both long-COVID neurological symptoms (74%) and social isolation/loneliness. The second cluster (n = 137) consisted of healthy patients who were also more socially connected and not lonely. The third cluster (n = 96) contained patients with neurological symptoms who were socially connected but lonely, and the fourth cluster (n = 63) consisted entirely of patients who had traumatic COVID hospitalization, were intubated, suffered symptoms, but were socially connected and experienced recovery. Conclusion The cluster analysis identified social isolation and loneliness as important features associated with long-COVID symptoms and recovery after hospitalization. It also confirms that social isolation and loneliness, though connected, are not necessarily the same. Physicians need to be aware of how social characteristics relate to long-COVID and patient’s ability to cope with the resulting symptoms.

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