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Life stressors significantly impact long-term outcomes and post-acute symptoms 12-months after COVID-19 hospitalization

Authors :
Jennifer A. Frontera
Sakinah Sabadia
Dixon Yang
Adam de Havenon
Shadi Yaghi
Ariane Lewis
Aaron S. Lord
Kara Melmed
Sujata Thawani
Laura J. Balcer
Thomas Wisniewski
Steven L. Galetta
Shashank Agarwal
Andres Andino
Vito Arena
Samuel Baskharoun
Kristie Bauman
Lena Bell
Stephen Berger
Dhristie Bhagat
Matthew Bokhari
Steven Bondi
Melanie Canizares
Alexander Chervinsky
Barry M. Czeisler
Levi Dygert
Taolin Fang
Brent Flusty
Daniel Friedman
David Friedman
Benjamin Fuchs
Andre Granger
Daniel Gratch
Lindsey Gurin
Josef Gutman
Lisena Hasanaj
Manisha Holmes
Jennifer Horng
Joshua Huang
Haruki Ishii
Ruben Jauregui
Yuan Ji
D. Ethan Kahn
Ethan Koch
Penina Krieger
Alexandra Kvernland
Rebecca Lalchan
Kaitlyn Lillemoe
Jessica Lin
Susan B. Liu
Maya Madhavan
Chaitanya Medicherla
Patricio Millar-Vernetti
Nicole Morgan
Anlys Olivera
Mirza Omari
George Park
Palak Patel
Milan Ristic
Jonathan Rosenthal
Michael Sonson
Thomas Snyder
Rebecca S. Stainman
Brian Sunwoo
Daniel Talmasov
Michael Tamimi
Betsy Thomas
Eduard Valdes
Ting Zhou
Yingrong Zhu
Source :
Journal of the neurological sciences. 443
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Limited data exists evaluating predictors of long-term outcomes after hospitalization for COVID-19.We conducted a prospective, longitudinal cohort study of patients hospitalized for COVID-19. The following outcomes were collected at 6 and 12-months post-diagnosis: disability using the modified Rankin Scale (mRS), activities of daily living assessed with the Barthel Index, cognition assessed with the telephone Montreal Cognitive Assessment (t-MoCA), Neuro-QoL batteries for anxiety, depression, fatigue and sleep, and post-acute symptoms of COVID-19. Predictors of these outcomes, including demographics, pre-COVID-19 comorbidities, index COVID-19 hospitalization metrics, and life stressors, were evaluated using multivariable logistic regression.Of 790 COVID-19 patients who survived hospitalization, 451(57%) completed 6-month (N = 383) and/or 12-month (N = 242) follow-up, and 77/451 (17%) died between discharge and 12-month follow-up. Significant life stressors were reported in 121/239 (51%) at 12-months. In multivariable analyses, life stressors including financial insecurity, food insecurity, death of a close contact and new disability were the strongest independent predictors of worse mRS, Barthel Index, depression, fatigue, and sleep scores, and prolonged symptoms, with adjusted odds ratios ranging from 2.5 to 20.8. Other predictors of poor outcome included older age (associated with worse mRS, Barthel, t-MoCA, depression scores), baseline disability (associated with worse mRS, fatigue, Barthel scores), female sex (associated with worse Barthel, anxiety scores) and index COVID-19 severity (associated with worse Barthel index, prolonged symptoms).Life stressors contribute substantially to worse functional, cognitive and neuropsychiatric outcomes 12-months after COVID-19 hospitalization. Other predictors of poor outcome include older age, female sex, baseline disability and severity of index COVID-19.

Details

ISSN :
18785883
Volume :
443
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of the neurological sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....45568beacc67ae7ee3a56e561994e0f0