Abstract:
Background: The prevalence, incidence, and interrelationships of persistent symptoms after SARS-CoV-2 infection (Long COVID) vary. There are limited data on specific phenotypes of persistent symptoms. Using latent class analysis (LCA) modeling, we sought to identify whether specific phenotypes of COVID-19 were present three months and six months after acute infection.
Methods: This was a multicenter, prospective study of symptomatic adults tested for SARS-CoV-2 with prospectively collected data on general symptoms and fatigue-related symptoms up to six-months post-diagnosis. Using LCA, we identified symptomatically homogenous groups among participants with COVID-19 (COVID-positive) and among others without COVID-19 (COVID-negative) at each time period for both general and fatigue-related symptoms.
Results: Among 5,963 baseline participants (4,504 COVID-positive and 1,459 COVID-negative), 4,056 had three-month and 2,856 had six-month data at the time of analysis. We identified four distinct phenotypes of post-COVID conditions at three- and six-months for both general and fatigue-related symptoms; minimal symptom groups represented 70% of participants at three and six months. When compared with the COVID-negative cohort, COVID-positive participants had higher occurrence of loss of taste and smell, as well cognition problems. There was substantial class-switching over time; those in one symptom class at three months were equally likely to remain or enter a new phenotype at six months.
Conclusions: We identified distinct classes of post-COVID phenotypes for general and fatigue-related symptoms. Most participants had minimal or no symptoms at three and six months follow-up. Significant proportions of participants changed symptom groups over time, suggesting that symptoms present during the acute illness may differ from prolonged symptoms and that post-COVID conditions may have a more dynamic nature than previously recognized.
Source: Michael Gottlieb, MD https://doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad277 (Full text available as PDF file)
, Long COVID Clinical Phenotypes Up to Six Months After Infection Identified by Latent Class Analysis of Self-Reported Symptoms, Open Forum Infectious Diseases, 2023;, ofad277,