Long COVID

Introduction[edit | edit source]

Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is the virus that causes coronavirus disease (COVID-19) [1]. The effects of COVID-19 have been characterised across different time points:

  • Acute COVID-19 infection with signs and symptoms of COVID-19 for up to 4 weeks.
  • Ongoing symptomatic COVID-19 with signs and symptoms of COVID-19 from 4 weeks up to 12 weeks.
  • Long term consequences of COVID-19 which usually presents with clusters of symptoms, often overlapping, which can fluctuate and change over time and can affect any system in the body for more than 12 weeks.[2]

The long term sequelae of COVID-19 awaits consensus definition, and a variety of nomenclature has been used to describe the long term signs and symptoms of COVID-19. This includes the patient directed terms "Long Covid" [3][4][5][6][7][8][9], "Long-Haul Covid" [4][10] and "Long Haulers" [11][12], plus other terms including "Post COVID-19 Condition" [13], "Post-COVID-19 syndrome" [2][14], "Post-COVID Syndrome" [15], "Post-Acute COVID-19" [16], and "Post-Acute COVID-19 syndrome"[15]. The policy brief (no. 39) from the World Health Organization regional office for Europe, used the term "Long COVID" [17]. For the purposes of consistency, this page will refer to the long term consequences of COVID-19 as "Long COVID" and to "People living with Long COVID". We will refer to "Long COVID" because this term acknowledges that disease cause and course are as yet unknown, makes clear that “mild” COVID-19 is not necessarily mild, avoids “chronic,” “post” and “syndrome” that may delegitimise people's experiences, draws attention to morbidity, and centres people with disability [3]. We will refer to "People living with Long COVID" to align with existing person first language,[18] applying knowledge from other health care conditions that are often associated with stigma.[19]

What is Long COVID?[edit | edit source]

Long Covid has been preliminarily defined by The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE), the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network, and the Royal College of General Practitioners, as the presence of signs and symptoms that develop during or following an infection consistent with COVID-19 which continue for 12-weeks or more and are not explained by an alternative diagnosis. This includes both ongoing symptomatic COVID-19 (from 4 to 12 weeks) and "Post-COVID Syndrome" (12-weeks or more).[20]

The rapid and dynamic review of Long Covid evidence by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) suggests that Long Covid may be made up of 4 phenotypes [18]:

  • post-intensive care
  • post-viral fatigue
  • permanent organ damage
  • long-term COVID

Long COVID affects people who have been hospitalised with acute COVID-19 and those who managed in a community setting. There is growing evidence to suggest that individuals who have suffered from both mild or severe COVID-19 can experience prolonged symptoms or develop Long COVID.[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28][29] Consensus has not yet been reached on an internationally agreed Long COVID case definition[6][17][30][31], however there is mounting evidence that Long COVID is both common and debilitating.[17] Attempts have been made to characterise Long Covid as prolonged with multi-system involvement and significant disability.[30][32]

Long COVID Symptoms[edit | edit source]

Long COVID usually presents as clusters of symptoms, often overlapping, which can fluctuate and change over time and can affect any system in the body. [17][20][30][33][34][35][36] Long COVID can include a range of different signs and symptoms across body systems including, but not limited to: pulmonary, cardiovascular, gastrointestinal, reproductive, genitourinary, endocrine, renal, dermatologic, musculoskeletal, neurological, neuropsychiatric, immunological, ophthalmic, and audiological.[30] A list of common Long COVID symptoms is provided by The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) [20].

The most common Long Covid symptom is fatigue.[30][33][37][38][29][39][40][41][25][42][43][44][45][46][47][27][48][49] The most frequently reported Long COVID symptoms after 6 months include fatigue, post-exertion malaise, and cognitive dysfunction [30]. The multidimensional, episodic and often unpredictable nature of Long COVID has been described as "relapsing and remitting"[34], whereby 86% of people with Long COVID report relapses over 7 months, with physical activity, stress, exercise and mental activity being the most common triggers of relapses.[30] The trajectory of Long COVID is heterogenous with some improving over time, some worsening and others stable, with many experiencing ongoing fluctuating symptoms after 6 months[30]. Among a sample of 47,780 people hospitalised with COVID-19 in the UK, 29.4% are readmitted within a few months, with increased risk of hospital readmission and organ impairment compared to matched controls.[50] Among a sample of 2,649 adults hospitalised with confirmed COVID-19 in Russia, 6-8 months after discharge from the hospital, around a half (47.1%) of patients reported at least one long-standing symptom since discharge, with fatigue (21.2%), shortness of breath (14.5%) and forgetfulness (9.1%) the most common long-standing symptoms reported.[47] Among a sample of 325 admitted to hospitals across the UK with confirmed COVID-19, half of participants reported feeling not fully recovered from COVID-19 (median follow-up 7 months), three quarters experienced fatigue, half were more breathless compared to before and around a quarter had a new disability in sight, walking, memory, self-care and/or communication.[51] Furthermore, outcomes were worse in working age females than males, with females under 50 being over five times more likely to report incomplete recovery, over five times more likely to report a new disability, more likely to have severe fatigue, and more than six times more likely to report increased breathless than males under 50.[51] It is estimated that 30% of people not hospitalised with "mild" acute symptoms, continue to have symptoms 9 months after infection.[27] Preliminary evidence suggests children also experience Long COVID symptoms similar to adults.[52]

Long COVID Prevalence[edit | edit source]

Estimating the prevalence of Long COVID symptoms poses several challenges due to current lack of consensus definition and limited data collection in national surveys. The COVID-19 Infection Survey[53] is a nationally representative sample of the UK community population, from which it is has been estimated that around 1 in 5 people exhibit Long COVID symptoms for 5 weeks or longer, and around 1 in 10 exhibit Long COVID symptoms for 12 weeks or longer [7][54]. The Zurich Coronavirus Cohort Study[48] recruited 437 SARS-CoV-2 positive individuals. Symptoms at diagnosis were reported by 90% of participants, of which 16%, 40%, 30% & 13% reported mild, moderate, severe and very severe symptoms respectively. Within two weeks of infection, 20% were hospitalised. At 6 months, 26% reported not having returned to normal health state; 31% among males and 21% among females. Furthermore, 23% among the non-hospitalised and 39% among the hospitalised reported not having fully recovered. The World Health Organization regional office for Europe Policy Brief on Long COVID, provides a selected evidence summary on Long COVID prevalence among both people non-hospitalised and hospitalsed.[17]

Pathological Process[edit | edit source]

The aetiology and pathophysiological causes of Long COVID symptoms remains unknown. Initial hypothesis include: viral persistence [55][56][57][58], continued hyperactive immune response[59][60][61], cellular metabolic dysfunction[62], auto-antibodies[63][64], neurological dysfunction[65][66][67][68], neuroimmunology[69], neurological inflammation[70], and organ impairment[29] including cardiac impairment [29][71][72][73][74][75]. Musculoskeletal short- and long-term consequences of COVID-19 are also discussed.[76] More research is required to understand the mechanisms by which Long COVID develops.[17]

Long COVID Management[edit | edit source]

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) published a rapid guideline on managing Long COVID[20], which covers identifying, assessing and managing Long COVID across all health care settings for adults, children and young people who have ongoing symptoms 4 weeks or more after the start of acute COVID-19. The novel nature of Long COVID has resulted in urgent calls for more research to fill existing gaps in knowledge [77]. Co-designed quality standards for Long COVID services are proposed with potential patient care pathway model, highlighting equity and ease of access, minimal patient care burden, clinical responsibility, a multidisciplinary and evidence-based approach, and patient involvement.[78] A multi-disciplinary approach assessment and management of Long COVID is essential.[17] Encompassing a disability model could improve clinicians’ responses to Long COVID.[79]

.

Outcome Measures[edit | edit source]

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) has encouraged the use of the International Classification of Functioning Disability and Health (ICF) to provide a framework and standard language for the description of health and health-related state, due to current insufficient evidence to provide guidance.[18] The ICF has been operationalised into the ICF Browser, ICF Checklist, and World Health Organization Disability Assessment Schedule (WHODAS) 2.0.

Some studies have performed a level of functional assessment, including:

It may be suitable to assess for post-exertion malaise[95] using measurement tools such as the DePaul Symptom Questionnaire[96]. People living with Long COVID report post-exertion malaise,[30] and the presence of this symptom would suggest exercise is not a safe rehabilitation intervention.[97]

The World Health Organization (WHO) invites clinicians and patients to collect information on COVID-19 in a systematic way and contribute clinical data to the WHO Clinical Platform to expand knowledge on Long COVID (here termed by WHO "Post-COVID-19 condition"), and support patient care and public health interventions. WHO’s Post COVID case report form (CRF) has been designed to report standardised clinical data from individuals after hospital discharge or after the acute illness to examine the medium- and long-term consequences of COVID-19. The forms will be available in multiple languages. The CRF includes questions on functioning and disability (section 2.5) adopted from WHODAS 2.0 12-item self-report questionnaire.

Management / Interventions[edit | edit source]

There is currently insufficient evidence on safe and effective interventions for management of Long COVID symptoms and impairments or disability. The World Health Organization has called on countries to offer people living with Long COVID more rehabilitation.[98]

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has cautioned against the use of graded exercise therapy (GET) for managing post-viral fatigue[77], in response to draft guidance updates on the management of Myalgic Encephalomyelitis / Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS).[97][99] Substantial concerns exist regarding the potential for harm in respect to GET as an intervention for ME/CFS.[100] Post-exertion malaise is a symptom experienced by people living with ME/CFS, [101] and is characterised as the worsening of symptoms by exertion including physical, cognitive and emotional activities,[102][103][104] which would prohibit exercise interventions. Among a sample of 3,762 people living with Long COVID, post-exertion malaise was reported by 72.2%, plus exercise is a common trigger for symptom relapses[30][32] warranting caution with exercise as a rehabilitation intervention for Long COVID and people living with COVID-19.

Groups representing people living with Long COVID have advocated for a risk stratification approach to exercise as a rehabilitation intervention. A focus is needed on assessing and excluding post-exertion malaise[95][96], plus screening for potential cardiac involvement[105] due to 32% prevalence of cardiac impairment among a young and low-risk population of people living with Long COVID and persistent symptoms.[29]

The National Health Service (NHS) provides free online self-management rehabilitation for people recovering from COVID-19 called "Your COVID Recovery".

Mount Sinai Long COVID Recovery programme provides free online breath-work for Long COVID called "STASIS".

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) recently funded a research award for the Rehabilitation Exercise and psycholoGical support After covid-19 InfectioN (REGAIN) study.[106]

Activity management or pacing is likely to be a safe and effective intervention for managing fatigue and post-exertion malaise. Heart rate monitoring is likely to be a safe and effective intervention for managing fatigue and post exertion malaise. Useful resources on pacing and heart rate monitoring are provided below:

Peer Support[edit | edit source]

Peer support involves people sharing knowledge, experience, or practical help with each other, often when living with the same or similar health conditions. Many online Long COVID peer support groups have been established for people living with Long COVID. These are safe spaces for people living with Long COVID to access peer support. Mutual respect and confidentiality is, therefore, requested in these groups. Many of these groups have outputs to share valuable information with allies. Long COVID Physio published blogs with JOSPT highlighting the value of peer support. Long COVID groups include:

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