Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

The burden of post-acute COVID-19 symptoms in a multinational network cohort analysis

  • Kristin Kostka,
  • Elena Roel,
  • Nhung T. H. Trinh,
  • Núria Mercadé-Besora,
  • Antonella Delmestri,
  • Lourdes Mateu,
  • Roger Paredes,
  • Talita Duarte-Salles,
  • Daniel Prieto-Alhambra,
  • Martí Català,
  • Annika M. Jödicke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42726-0
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Persistent symptoms following the acute phase of COVID-19 present a major burden to both the affected and the wider community. We conducted a cohort study including over 856,840 first COVID-19 cases, 72,422 re-infections and more than 3.1 million first negative-test controls from primary care electronic health records from Spain and the UK (Sept 2020 to Jan 2022 (UK)/March 2022 (Spain)). We characterised post-acute COVID-19 symptoms and identified key symptoms associated with persistent disease. We estimated incidence rates of persisting symptoms in the general population and among COVID-19 patients over time. Subsequently, we investigated which WHO-listed symptoms were particularly differential by comparing their frequency in COVID-19 cases vs. matched test-negative controls. Lastly, we compared persistent symptoms after first infections vs. reinfections.Our study shows that the proportion of COVID-19 cases affected by persistent post-acute COVID-19 symptoms declined over the study period. Risk for altered smell/taste was consistently higher in patients with COVID-19 vs test-negative controls. Persistent symptoms were more common after reinfection than following a first infection. More research is needed into the definition of long COVID, and the effect of interventions to minimise the risk and impact of persistent symptoms.