PLoS ONE (Jan 2024)

Using a data-driven approach to define post-COVID conditions in US electronic health record data.

  • Kathleen M Andersen,
  • Farid L Khan,
  • Peter W Park,
  • Timothy L Wiemken,
  • Birol Emir,
  • Deepa Malhotra,
  • Tuka Alhanai,
  • Mohammad M Ghassemi,
  • Leah J McGrath

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0300570
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 4
p. e0300570

Abstract

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ObjectiveTo create a data-driven definition of post-COVID conditions (PCC) by directly measure changes in symptomatology before and after a first COVID episode.Materials and methodsRetrospective cohort study using Optum® de-identified Electronic Health Record (EHR) dataset from the United States of persons of any age April 2020-September 2021. For each person with COVID (ICD-10-CM U07.1 "COVID-19" or positive test result), we selected up to 3 comparators. The final COVID symptom score was computed as the sum of new diagnoses weighted by each diagnosis' ratio of incidence in COVID group relative to comparator group. For the subset of COVID cases diagnosed in September 2021, we compared the incidence of PCC using our data-driven definition with ICD-10-CM code U09.9 "Post-COVID Conditions", first available in the US October 2021.ResultsThe final cohort contained 588,611 people with COVID, with mean age of 48 years and 38% male. Our definition identified 20% of persons developed PCC in follow-up. PCC incidence increased with age: (7.8% of persons aged 0-17, 17.3% aged 18-64, and 33.3% aged 65+) and did not change over time (20.0% among persons diagnosed with COVID in 2020 versus 20.3% in 2021). For cases diagnosed in September 2021, our definition identified 19.0% with PCC in follow-up as compared to 2.9% with U09.9 code in follow-up.ConclusionSymptom and U09.9 code-based definitions alone captured different populations. Maximal capture may consider a combined approach, particularly before the availability and routine utilization of specific ICD-10 codes and with the lack consensus-based definitions on the syndrome.