Abstract:
Background: Post-COVID condition (PCC) and Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) show marked clinical overlap, suggesting a shared post-infectious pathophysiology. This study aims to characterize the longitudinal change of autonomic function, small-fiber integrity, cognitive performance, and clinical symptoms in PCC and ME/CFS, and to determine whether trajectories differ between diagnostic groups.
Methods: Thirty-eight participants (21 PCC, 17 ME/CFS) underwent two standardized evaluations separated by a median of 31 months. Assessments included comprehensive autonomic testing, small-fiber evaluation, and an extensive neuropsychological battery.
Results: ME/CFS showed longer disease duration than PCC at baseline (median 42 vs. 12 months), while the interval between evaluations was comparable (31 vs. 30 months). Baseline profiles were largely overlapping, although ME/CFS showed nominally higher QST warm detection thresholds (p = 0.034), greater autonomic symptom burden (p = 0.038), and lower hemodynamic scores (p = 0.019), none surviving FDR correction. Cross-domain analyses linked small-fiber symptoms with autonomic symptom burden (Rho = 0.65, pFDR = 0.002) and fatigue (Rho = 0.55, pFDR = 0.018), while fatigue was negatively associated with processing speed (Rho = – 0.57, pFDR = 0.004), attention (Rho = – 0.49, pFDR = 0.018), and executive function (Rho = – 0.44, pFDR = 0.047). Rank-transformed mixed-effects models identified FDR-corrected Time effects, with increases in CHEPs (pFDR < 0.001) and verbal memory (pFDR = 0.010), and decreases in processing speed (pFDR = 0.006) and QST cold thresholds (pFDR = 0.038).
Conclusions: PCC and ME/CFS showed broadly overlapping multidomain profiles, with particularly similar profiles at follow-up. This suggests that, among individuals with persistent symptoms, PCC may increasingly resemble longer-standing ME/CFS across autonomic, small-fiber/sensory, and cognitive domains. These findings are consistent with overlapping post-infectious mechanisms, but do not establish identical disease trajectories or definitive disease convergence.
Source: Azcue N, Barranco C, Tijero-Merino B, Acera M, Fernández-Valle T, Lafuente JV, Gabilondo I, Ruiz-Lopez M, Del Pino R, Gómez-Esteban JC. Two-timepoint multidomain follow-up of post-COVID condition and ME/CFS: overlapping autonomic, small-fiber, and cognitive changes. J Transl Med. 2026 Jun 12. doi: 10.1186/s12967-026-08321-9. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 42286686. https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12967-026-08321-9 (Full study available as PDF file)