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Persistent symptoms and decreased health-related quality of life after symptomatic pediatric COVID-19: A prospective study in a Latin American tertiary hospital.

Authors :
Fink TT
Marques HHS
Gualano B
Lindoso L
Bain V
Astley C
Martins F
Matheus D
Matsuo OM
Suguita P
Trindade V
Paula CSY
Farhat SCL
Palmeira P
Leal GN
Suzuki L
Odone Filho V
Carneiro-Sampaio M
Duarte AJS
Antonangelo L
Batisttella LR
Polanczyk GV
Pereira RMR
Carvalho CRR
Buchpiguel CA
Xavier ACL
Seelaender M
Silva CA
Pereira MFB
Sallum AME
Brentani AVM
Neto ÁJS
Ihara A
Santos AR
Canton APM
Watanabe A
Santos ACD
Pastorino AC
Franco BDGM
Caruzo B
Ceneviva C
Martins CCMF
Prado D
Abellan DM
Benatti FB
Smaria F
Gonçalves FT
Penteado FD
Castro GSF
Gonçalves GS
Roschel H
Disi IR
Marques IG
Castro IA
Buscatti IM
Faiad JZ
Fiamoncini J
Rodrigues JC
Carneiro JDA
Paz JA
Ferreira JC
Ferreira JCO
Silva KR
Bastos KLM
Kozu K
Cristofani LM
Souza LVB
Campos LMA
Silva Filho LVRF
Sapienza MT
Lima MS
Garanito MP
Santos MFA
Dorna MB
Aikawa NE
Litvinov N
Sakita NK
Gaiolla PVV
Pasqualucci P
Toma RK
Correa-Silva S
Sieczkowska SM
Imamura M
Forsait S
Santos VA
Zheng Y
Source :
Clinics (Sao Paulo, Brazil) [Clinics (Sao Paulo)] 2021 Nov 26; Vol. 76, pp. e3511. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Nov 26 (Print Publication: 2021).
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objectives: To prospectively evaluate demographic, anthropometric and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) in pediatric patients with laboratory-confirmed coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19).<br />Methods: This was a longitudinal observational study of surviving pediatric post-COVID-19 patients (n=53) and pediatric subjects without laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 included as controls (n=52) was performed.<br />Results: The median duration between COVID-19 diagnosis (n=53) and follow-up was 4.4 months (0.8-10.7). Twenty-three of 53 (43%) patients reported at least one persistent symptom at the longitudinal follow-up visit and 12/53 (23%) had long COVID-19, with at least one symptom lasting for >12 weeks. The most frequently reported symptoms at the longitudinal follow-up visit were headache (19%), severe recurrent headache (9%), tiredness (9%), dyspnea (8%), and concentration difficulty (4%). At the longitudinal follow-up visit, the frequencies of anemia (11% versus 0%, p=0.030), lymphopenia (42% versus 18%, p=0.020), C-reactive protein level of >30 mg/L (35% versus 0%, p=0.0001), and D-dimer level of >1000 ng/mL (43% versus 6%, p=0.0004) significantly reduced compared with baseline values. Chest X-ray abnormalities (11% versus 2%, p=0.178) and cardiac alterations on echocardiogram (33% versus 22%, p=0.462) were similar at both visits. Comparison of characteristic data between patients with COVID-19 at the longitudinal follow-up visit and controls showed similar age (p=0.962), proportion of male sex (p=0.907), ethnicity (p=0.566), family minimum monthly wage (p=0.664), body mass index (p=0.601), and pediatric pre-existing chronic conditions (p=1.000). The Pediatric Quality of Live Inventory 4.0 scores, median physical score (69 [0-100] versus 81 [34-100], p=0.012), and school score (60 [15-100] versus 70 [15-95], p=0.028) were significantly lower in pediatric patients with COVID-19 at the longitudinal follow-up visit than in controls.<br />Conclusions: Pediatric patients with COVID-19 showed a longitudinal impact on HRQoL parameters, particularly in physical/school domains, reinforcing the need for a prospective multidisciplinary approach for these patients. These data highlight the importance of closer monitoring of children and adolescents by the clinical team after COVID-19.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1980-5322
Volume :
76
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Clinics (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
34852145
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6061/clinics/2021/e3511