Respiratory Research (Aug 2022)

Cluster analysis unveils a severe persistent respiratory impairment phenotype 3-months after severe COVID-19

  • Jeanne-Marie Perotin,
  • Fabien Gierski,
  • Lois Bolko,
  • Sandra Dury,
  • Sarah Barrière,
  • Claire Launois,
  • Maxime Dewolf,
  • Stéphane Chouabe,
  • Eric Bongrain,
  • Davy Picard,
  • Eric Tran,
  • Yoann N’Guyen,
  • Bruno Mourvillier,
  • Amélie Servettaz,
  • Amandine Rapin,
  • Claude Marcus,
  • François Lebargy,
  • Arthur Kaladjian,
  • Jean-Hugues Salmon,
  • Gaetan Deslee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12931-022-02111-9
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 10

Abstract

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Abstract Background The mid-term respiratory sequelae in survivors of severe COVID-19 appear highly heterogeneous. In addition, factors associated with respiratory sequelae are not known. In this monocentric prospective study, we performed a multidisciplinary assessment for respiratory and muscular impairment and psychological distress 3 months after severe COVID-19. We analysed factors associated with severe persistent respiratory impairment, amongst demographic, COVID-19 severity, and 3-month assessment. Methods Patients with severe SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia requiring ≥ 4L/min were included for a systematic 3-month visit, including respiratory assessment (symptoms, lung function, CT scan), muscular evaluation (body composition, physical function and activity, disability), psychopathological evaluation (anxiety, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder-PTSD) and quality of life. A cluster analysis was performed to identify subgroups of patients based on objective functional measurements: DLCO, total lung capacity and 6-min walking distance (6MWD). Results Sixty-two patients were analysed, 39% had dyspnea on exercise (mMRC ≥ 2), 72% had DLCO < 80%, 90% had CT-scan abnormalities; 40% had sarcopenia/pre-sarcopenia and 31% had symptoms of PTSD. Cluster analysis identified a group of patients (n = 18, 30.5%) with a severe persistent (SP) respiratory impairment (DLCO 48 ± 12%, 6MWD 299 ± 141 m). This SP cluster was characterized by older age, severe respiratory symptoms, but also sarcopenia/pre-sarcopenia, symptoms of PTSD and markedly impaired quality of life. It was not associated with initial COVID-19 severity or management. Conclusions and clinical implication We identified a phenotype of patients with severe persistent respiratory and muscular impairment and psychological distress 3 months after severe COVID-19. Our results highlight the need for multidisciplinary assessment and management after severe SARS-CoV-2 pneumonia. Trial registration The study was registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (May 6, 2020): NCT04376840

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