Low-dose naltrexone and NAD+ for the treatment of patients with persistent fatigue symptoms after COVID-19

Highlights:

  • A subset of patients experienced persistent fatigue symptoms after COVID-19.
  • Treatment with low-dose naltrexone (LDN) and NAD+ was well tolerated.
  • Treatment increased SF-36 quality of life scores.
  • Treatment also improved fatigue symptom scores.
  • A subset of patients were clinically responsive.

Abstract:

A subset of patients experiences persistent fatigue symptoms after COVID-19, and patients may develop long COVID, which is characterized by lasting systemic symptoms. No treatments for this condition have been validated and are urgently warranted.

In this pilot study, we assessed whether treatment with low-dose naltrexone (LDN, 4.5 mg/day) and supplementation with NAD + through iontophoresis patches could improve fatigue symptoms and quality of life in 36 patients with persistent moderate/severe fatigue after COVID-19.

We detected a significant increase from baseline in SF-36 survey scores after 12 weeks of treatment (mean total SF-36 score 36.5 [SD: 15.6] vs. 52.1 [24.8]; p < 0.0001), suggestive of improvement of quality of life. Furthermore, participants scored significantly lower on the Chalder fatigue scale after 12 weeks of treatment (baseline: 25.9 [4.6], 12 weeks: 17.4 [9.7]; p < 0.0001).

We found a subset of 52 % of patients to be responders after 12 weeks of treatment. Treatment was generally safe, with mild adverse events previously reported for LDN, which could be managed with dose adjustments. The iontophoresis patches were associated with mild, short-lived skin irritation in 25 % of patients.

Our data suggest treatment with LDN and NAD+ is safe and may be beneficial in a subset of patients with persistent fatigue after COVID-19. Larger randomized controlled trials will have to confirm our data and determine which patient subpopulations might benefit most from this strategy.

Source: Anar Isman, Andy Nyquist, Bailey Strecker, Girish Harinath, Virginia Lee, Xingyu Zhang, Sajad Zalzala. Low-dose naltrexone and NAD+ for the treatment of patients with persistent fatigue symptoms after COVID-19. Brain, Behavior, & Immunity – Health, Volume 36, 2024, 100733, ISSN 2666-3546, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2024.100733. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666354624000115 (Full text)

Neutrophil degranulation, endothelial and metabolic dysfunction in unvaccinated long COVID patients

Abstract:

Background: Long COVID symptoms are widely diffused and have a poorly understood pathophysiology, with possible involvement of inflammatory cytokines.

Materials and methods: A prospective follow-up study involved 385 unvaccinated patients, started 1 month after SARS-CoV-2 infection and continued for up to 12 months. We compared circulating biomarkers of neutrophil degranulation, endothelial and metabolic dysfunction in subjects with long COVID symptoms and in asymptomatic post-COVID controls.

Results: The highest occurrence of symptoms (71%) was after 3 months from the infection, decreasing to 62.3% and 29.4% at 6 and 12 months, respectively. Compared to controls, long COVID patients had increased levels of the neutrophilic degranulation indices MMP-8 and MPO, of endothelial dysfunction indices L-selectin and P-selectin. Among indices of metabolic dysfunction, leptin levels were higher in long COVID patients than in controls.

Conclusion: In unvaccinated patients, symptoms may persist up to 1 year after acute COVID infection, with increased indices of neutrophil degranulation, endothelial and metabolic dysfunction. The clinical implications of specific inflammatory biomarkers require further attention, especially in individuals with fatigue and long COVID-linked cognitive dysfunctions.

Source: Di Ciaula A, Liberale L, Portincasa P, Khalil M, Galerati I, Farella I, Noto A, JohnBritto S, Moriero M, Michelauz C, Frè F, Olivero C, Bertolotto M, Montecucco F, Carbone F, Bonfrate L. Neutrophil degranulation, endothelial and metabolic dysfunction in unvaccinated long COVID patients. Eur J Clin Invest. 2024 Jan 16:e14155. doi: 10.1111/eci.14155. Epub ahead of print. PMID: 38226472. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38226472/

Determinants of the onset and prognosis of the post-COVID-19 condition: a 2-year prospective observational cohort study

Abstract:

Background: At least 5-10% of subjects surviving COVID-19 develop the post-COVID-19 condition (PCC) or “Long COVID”. The clinical presentation of PCC is heterogeneous, its pathogenesis is being deciphered, and objective, validated biomarkers are lacking. It is unknown if PCC is a single entity or a heterogeneous syndrome with overlapping pathophysiological basis. The large US RECOVER study identified four clusters of subjects with PCC according to their presenting symptoms. However, the long-term clinical implications of PCC remain unknown.

Methods: We conducted a 2-year prospective cohort study of subjects surviving COVID-19, including individuals fulfilling the WHO PCC definition and subjects with full clinical recovery. We systematically collected post-COVID-19 symptoms using prespecified questionnaires and performed additional diagnostic imaging tests when needed. Factors associated with PCC were identified and modelled using logistic regression. Unsupervised clustering analysis was used to group subjects with PCC according to their presenting symptoms. Factors associated with PCC recovery were modelled using a direct acyclic graph approach.

Findings: The study included 548 individuals, 341 with PCC, followed for a median of 23 months (IQR 16.5-23.5), and 207 subjects fully recovered. In the model with the best fit, subjects who were male and had tertiary studies were less likely to develop PCC, whereas a history of headache, or presence of tachycardia, fatigue, neurocognitive and neurosensitive complaints and dyspnea at COVID-19 diagnosis predicted the development of PCC. The cluster analysis revealed the presence of three symptom clusters with an additive number of symptoms. Only 26 subjects (7.6%) recovered from PCC during follow-up; almost all of them (n = 24) belonged to the less symptomatic cluster A, dominated mainly by fatigue. Recovery from PCC was more likely in subjects who were male, required ICU admission, or had cardiovascular comorbidities, hyporexia and/or smell/taste alterations during acute COVID-19. Subjects presenting with muscle pain, impaired attention, dyspnea, or tachycardia, conversely, were less likely to recover from PCC.

Interpretation: Preexisting medical and socioeconomic factors, as well as acute COVID-19 symptoms, are associated with the development of and recovery from the PCC. Recovery is extremely rare during the first 2 years, posing a major challenge to healthcare systems.

Source: Mateu L, Tebe C, Loste C, Santos JR, Lladós G, López C, España-Cueto S, Toledo R, Font M, Chamorro A, Muñoz-López F, Nevot M, Vallejo N, Teis A, Puig J, Fumaz CR, Muñoz-Moreno JA, Prats A, Estany-Quera C, Coll-Fernández R, Herrero C, Casares P, Garcia A, Clotet B, Paredes R, Massanella M. Determinants of the onset and prognosis of the post-COVID-19 condition: a 2-year prospective observational cohort study. Lancet Reg Health Eur. 2023 Sep 5;33:100724. doi: 10.1016/j.lanepe.2023.100724. PMID: 37954002; PMCID: PMC10636281. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10636281/ (Full text)

Correlations of Long COVID Symptoms and Inflammatory Markers of Complete Blood Count (CBC): A cross-sectional study

Abstract:

Background: Long-COVID refers to lasting unspecific symptoms like fatigue, decreased concentration and sleep issues after infection which persist for at least three months and cannot be attributed to other causes. Previous studies surveyed the association between inflammatory markers like C – reactive protein (CRP) at hospital admission and long-COVID symptoms in the preceding months. Post-COVID syndrome can affect one-third of patients. Thus early diagnosis can assist in reducing burdens on public health. We attempted to see any correlations between complete blood count (CBC) markers (like red blood cell (RBC), white blood cell (WBC), Neutrophil to lymphocyte ratio (NLR), etc.) at hospital admission and long COVID symptoms at a 6-month follow-up.

Methods: 167 patients (44.9% females, mean age 49 years old) answered semi-structural interviews through telemedicine which focused on the three prominent symptoms: fatigue, loss of concentration and decreased libido.

Results: Two third of patients have symptoms of long COVID and others do not have. NLR in the symptomatic group was statically higher. Patients who underwent decreased libido at a 6-month follow-up had significantly more severe lymphopenia (p ¼ 0.028) and higher NLR values (p-value ¼ 0.007). Poor mental concentration is associated with high WBC in numbers and polymorphonuclear (PMN) count. Other symptoms do not correlate with blood markers.

Conclusion: Utilizing available data like CBC can help predict the upcoming symptoms of previously hospitalized patients and further measures like rehabilitation. Additional investigations should be done on the

Source: Radkhah, Hanieh; Omidali, Mehrnia; Hejrati, Alireza; Bahri, Razman Arabzadeh; Arefi, Sara; Behzadi, Amirhossein; Eslami, Mohamad; Khadembashiri, Mohammadmehdi; Khadembashiri, Mohammadamin; Najafirashed, Maryam; and Amiri, Bahareh Shateri (2023) “Correlations of Long COVID Symptoms and Inflammatory Markers of Complete Blood Count (CBC): A cross-sectional study.,” Journal of Community Hospital Internal Medicine Perspectives: Vol. 13: Iss. 6, Article 25. DOI: 10.55729/2000-9666.1259 https://scholarlycommons.gbmc.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1259&context=jchimp (Full text)

Characterization of neurocognitive deficits in patients with post-COVID-19 syndrome: persistence, patients’ complaints, and clinical predictors.

Abstract:

Introduction: Cognitive symptoms persisting beyond 3 months following COVID-19 present a considerable disease burden. We aimed to establish a domain-specific cognitive profile of post-COVID-19 syndrome (PCS). We examined the deficits’ persistence, relationships with subjective cognitive complaints, and clinical variables, to identify the most relevant cognitive deficits and their predictors.

Methods: This cross-sectional study examined cognitive performance and patient-reported and clinical predictors of cognitive deficits in PCS patients (n = 282) and socio-demographically comparable healthy controls (n = 52).

Results: On the Oxford Cognitive Screen-Plus, the patient group scored significantly lower in delayed verbal memory, attention, and executive functioning than the healthy group. In each affected domain, 10 to 20% of patients performed more than 1.5 SD below the control mean. Delayed memory was particularly affected, with a small effect of hospitalization and age. Attention scores were predicted by hospitalization and fatigue.

Discussion: Thus, PCS is associated with long-term cognitive dysfunction, particularly in delayed memory, attention, and executive functioning. Memory deficits seem to be of particular relevance to patients’ experience of subjective impairment. Hospitalization, fatigue, and age seem to predict cognitive deficits, while time since infection, depression, and pre-existing conditions do not.

Source: Kozik V, Reuken P, Utech I, Gramlich J, Stallmach Z, Demeyere N, Rakers F, Schwab M, Stallmach A, Finke K. Characterization of neurocognitive deficits in patients with post-COVID-19 syndrome: persistence, patients’ complaints, and clinical predictors. Front Psychol. 2023 Oct 17;14:1233144. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1233144. PMID: 37915528; PMCID: PMC10616256. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10616256/ (Full text)

Blood T cell phenotypes correlate with fatigue severity in post-acute sequelae of COVID-19

Abstract:

Purpose: Post-acute sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) affect approximately 10% of convalescent patients. The spectrum of symptoms is broad and heterogeneous with fatigue being the most often reported sequela. Easily accessible blood biomarkers to determine PASC severity are lacking. Thus, our study aimed to correlate immune phenotypes with PASC across the severity spectrum of COVID-19.

Methods: A total of 176 originally immunonaïve, convalescent COVID-19 patients from a prospective cohort during the first pandemic phase were stratified by initial disease severity and underwent clinical, psychosocial, and immune phenotyping around 10 weeks after first COVID-19 symptoms. COVID-19-associated fatigue dynamics were assessed and related to clinical and immune phenotypes.

Results: Fatigue and severe fatigue were commonly reported irrespective of initial COVID-19 severity or organ-specific PASC. A clinically relevant increase in fatigue severity after COVID-19 was detected in all groups. Neutralizing antibody titers were higher in patients with severe acute disease, but no association was found between antibody titers and PASC. While absolute peripheral blood immune cell counts in originally immunonaïve PASC patients did not differ from unexposed controls, peripheral CD3+CD4+ T cell counts were independently correlated with fatigue severity across all strata in multivariable analysis.

Conclusions: Patients were at similar risk of self-reported PASC irrespective of initial disease severity. The independent correlation between fatigue severity and blood T cell phenotypes indicates a possible role of CD4+ T cells in the pathogenesis of post-COVID-19 fatigue, which might serve as a blood biomarker.

Source: Pink, I., Hennigs, J.K., Ruhl, L. et al. Blood T cell phenotypes correlate with fatigue severity in post-acute sequelae of COVID-19. Infection (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s15010-023-02114-8 https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s15010-023-02114-8 (Full text)

Fatigue in post COVID-19 patients: the P4O2 COVID-19 study

Abstract:

Background: Some patients do not fully recover after COVID-19 and have symptoms occurring 3 months after acute illness, lasting for >2 months, defined as post COVID-19. Fatigue seems most present in post COVID-19 and part of the patients might develop symptoms similar to chronic fatigue syndrome.

Aim: To determine the occurrence of fatigue and other symptoms in post COVID-19 patients.

Methods: In the prospective P4O2 COVID-19 cohort, post COVID-19 patients aged 40-65 years were recruited from outpatient post-COVID clinics in 5 Dutch hospitals between May 2021-September 2022. At 3-6 months post-COVID, patients completed the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS). If the FSS score was ≥4 (the cut-off for severe fatigue), patients also completed the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire version 2 (DSQ-2). The FSS ranges from 1-7 and a higher score means more fatigued. The DSQ-2 rates frequency and severity of 79 symptoms on a 5-point Likert scale. Binary thresholds (if scored ≥2 on both severity and frequency, the threshold is met and the symptom is present) were calculated.

Results: The mean age of the 78 included patients was 53.9±6.2 and 51.7% were male. Median (IQR) FSS score was 5.6 (4.2-6.3) and 66 patients (84.6%) had a score ≥4. According to the DSQ-2 (n=61), patients reported a median (IQR) of 16 (8-23) symptoms. The majority of the patients experienced fatigue (85%). Furthermore, post-exertional malaise (PEM) (40%), sleep-related problems (37%), pain (21%) and neurocognitive problems (23%) were frequently reported.

Conclusion: The occurrence of severe fatigue 3-6 months after COVID-19 was 84.6% in our cohort. Patients with severe fatigue also frequently reported PEM, sleep related problems, pain and neurocognitive problems.

Source: Merel E.B. Cornelissen, Lizan D. Bloemsma, Nadia Baalbaki, Somayeh Bazdar, Jelle M. Blankestijn, Inés Beekers, Rosanne J.H.C.G. Beijers, Joop P. Van Den Bergh, Debbie Gach, J.J. Miranda Geelhoed, Sebastiaan Holverda, Laura Houweling, John J. Jacobs, Renée Jonker, Ivo Van Der Lee, Paulien M.A. Linders, Lieke C.E. Noij, Esther J. Nossent, Marianne A. Van De Pol, Daphne W. Schaminee, Annemie M.W.J. Schols, Lisanne T. Schuurman, Brigitte Sondermeijer, Anouk W. Vaes, Els J.M. Weersink, Yolanda De Wit-Van Wijck, Martijn A. Spruit, Anke H. Maitland-Van Der Zee. Fatigue in post COVID-19 patients: the P4O2 COVID-19 study.

Immunological profiling in long COVID: overall low grade inflammation and T-lymphocyte senescence and increased monocyte activation correlating with increasing fatigue severity

Abstract:

Background: Many patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection develop long COVID with fatigue as one of the most disabling symptoms. We performed clinical and immune profiling of fatigued and non-fatigued long COVID patients and age- and sex-matched healthy controls (HCs).

Methods: Long COVID symptoms were assessed using patient-reported outcome measures, including the fatigue assessment scale (FAS, scores ≥22 denote fatigue), and followed up to one year after hospital discharge. We assessed inflammation-related genes in circulating monocytes, serum levels of inflammation-regulating cytokines, and leukocyte and lymphocyte subsets, including major monocyte subsets and senescent T-lymphocytes, at 3-6 months post-discharge.

Results: We included 37 fatigued and 36 non-fatigued long COVID patients and 42 HCs. Fatigued long COVID patients represented a more severe clinical profile than non-fatigued patients, with many concurrent symptoms (median 9 [IQR 5.0-10.0] vs 3 [1.0-5.0] symptoms, p<0.001), and signs of cognitive failure (41%) and depression (>24%). Immune abnormalities that were found in the entire group of long COVID patients were low grade inflammation (increased inflammatory gene expression in monocytes, increased serum pro-inflammatory cytokines) and signs of T-lymphocyte senescence (increased exhausted CD8+ TEMRA-lymphocytes). Immune profiles did not significantly differ between fatigued and non-fatigued long COVID groups. However, the severity of fatigue (total FAS score) significantly correlated with increases of intermediate and non-classical monocytes, upregulated gene levels of CCL2, CCL7, and SERPINB2 in monocytes, increases in serum Galectin-9, and higher CD8+ T-lymphocyte counts.

Conclusion: Long COVID with fatigue is associated with many concurrent and persistent symptoms lasting up to one year after hospitalization. Increased fatigue severity associated with stronger signs of monocyte activation in long COVID patients and potentially point in the direction of monocyte-endothelial interaction. These abnormalities were present against a background of immune abnormalities common to the entire group of long COVID patients.

Source: Berentschot Julia C., Drexhage Hemmo A., Aynekulu Mersha Daniel G., Wijkhuijs Annemarie J. M., GeurtsvanKessel Corine H., Koopmans Marion P. G., Voermans Jolanda J. C., Hendriks Rudi W., Nagtzaam Nicole M. A., de Bie Maaike, Heijenbrok-Kal Majanka H., Bek L. Martine, Ribbers Gerard M., van den Berg-Emons Rita J. G., Aerts Joachim G. J. V., Dik Willem A., Hellemons Merel E. Immunological profiling in long COVID: overall low grade inflammation and T-lymphocyte senescence and increased monocyte activation correlating with increasing fatigue severity. Frontiers in Immunology, vol 14, 2023. DOI=10.3389/fimmu.2023.1254899 ISSN=1664-3224 https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1254899/full (Full text)

 

Investigating the Effect of COVID-19 Infection on Professional Athletes’ Post-infection With a Focus on Fatigue and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome

Abstract:

Introduction and objectives: COVID-19 has been reported to cause long-term sequela including persistent fatigue and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) in the general population. However, it remains to be seen if similar effects are observed in an athlete population. The aetiology and pathophysiology are poorly understood but is thought to be multi-factorial. Patient reported outcome measures are commonly used to improve patient-centred outcomes (PROMs). They are essential to assess patient quality of life post-COVID infection. This paper aims to assess the effect of COVID-19 on athletes’ long-term fatigue and CFS and identify the PROMs used to characterise this.

Methodology: Articles were selected for extraction based on the eligibility criteria and PRISMA guidelines. The inclusion criteria required papers to assess competitive athletes over eighteen years of age who were clinically diagnosed with COVID-19. Articles were extracted to assess different variables including type of sport, type of athlete and ethnicity. Key terms were obtained using MeSH trees and utilised with Web of Science and NCBI Pubmed. Papers were graded by quality using the Hawker quality assessment tool.

Results and discussion: Forty articles (N=40) were identified for full-text screening (N=8). Eight were selected for extraction based on the eligibility criteria. Data was obtained on athlete characteristics, sport characteristics, properties of PROM measurement techniques and fatigue presentation. Male athletes were found to be 10-50% more likely than female athletes to suffer from persistent fatigue symptoms (N=2). Persistent fatigue was present in 9-10% Athletes from mixed backgrounds and genders (N=2). Initial fatigue was documented to be between 47-56% (N=2). A heterogenous range of PROMs were utilised to assess symptoms including fatigue and excluded emotional or mental fatigue.

Conclusion: COVID-19 is associated with signs of persisting fatigue and potentially CFS in athlete populations. More work needs to be done to develop standardised and validated PROMs specific to CFS.

Source: Sarwary, Reza and Tareen, Manahil and Hocaoglu, Mevhibe, Investigating the Effect of COVID-19 Infection on Professional Athletes’ Post-infection With a Focus on Fatigue and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (January 16, 2023). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4573649 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4573649 (Full text available as PDF file)

Effects of six-month creatine supplementation on patient- and clinician-reported outcomes, and tissue creatine levels in patients with post-COVID-19 fatigue syndrome

Abstract:

Dietary creatine has been recently put forward as a possible intervention strategy to reduce post-COVID-19 fatigue syndrome yet no clinical study so far evaluated its efficacy and safety for this perplexing condition. In this parallel-group, randomized placebo-controlled double-blind trial, we analyzed the effects of 6-month creatine supplementation (4 g of creatine monohydrate per day) on various patient- and clinician-reported outcomes, and tissue creatine levels in 12 patients with post-COVID-19 fatigue syndrome.

Creatine intake induced a significant increase in tissue creatine levels in vastus medialis muscle and right parietal white matter compared to the baseline values at both 3-month and 6-month follow-ups (p < .05). Two-way analysis of variance with repeated measures revealed a significant difference (treatment vs. time interaction) between interventions in tissue creatine levels (p < .05), with the creatine group was superior to placebo to augment creatine levels at vastus medialis muscle, left frontal white matter, and right parietal white matter.

Creatine supplementation induced a significant reduction in general fatigue after 3 months of intake compared to baseline values (p = .04), and significantly improved scores for several post-COVID-19 fatigue syndrome-related symptoms (e.g., ageusia, breathing difficulties, body aches, headache, and difficulties concentrating) at 6-month follow-up (p < .05). Taking creatine for 6 months appears to improve tissue bioenergetics and attenuate clinical features of post-COVID-19 fatigue syndrome; additional studies are warranted to confirm our findings in various post-COVID-19 cohorts.

Source: Slankamenac, J.Ranisavljev, M.Todorovic, N.Ostojic, J.Stajer, V., & Ostojic, S. M. (2023). Effects of six-month creatine supplementation on patient- and clinician-reported outcomes, and tissue creatine levels in patients with post-COVID-19 fatigue syndromeFood Science & Nutrition0017https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.3597 (Full text)