Hannum Mackenzie E, Ramirez Vicente A, Lipson Sarah J, Herriman Riley D, Toskala Aurora K, Lin Cailu, Joseph Paule V, Reed Danielle R
Monell Chemical Senses Center, 3500 Market St, Philadelphia PA 19104.
Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Nursing Research, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, USA.
medRxiv. 2020 Jul 6:2020.07.04.20145870. doi: 10.1101/2020.07.04.20145870.
Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2), which causes coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), has currently infected over 6.5 million people worldwide. In response to the pandemic, numerous studies have tried to identify causes and symptoms of the disease. Emerging evidence supports recently acquired anosmia (complete loss of smell) and hyposmia (partial loss of smell) as symptoms of COVID-19, but studies of olfactory dysfunction show a wide range of prevalence, from 5% to 98%. We undertook a search of Pubmed/Medline and Google Scholar with the keywords "COVID-19," "smell," and/or "olfaction." We included any study that quantified olfactory loss as a symptom of COVID-19. Studies were grouped and compared based on the type of method used to measure smell loss-subjective measures such as self-reported smell loss versus objective measures using rated stimuli-to determine if prevalence rate differed by method type. For each study, 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated from point estimates of olfactory disturbance rates. We identified 34 articles quantifying anosmia as a symptom of COVID-19, collected from cases identified from January 16 to April 30, 2020. The pooled prevalence estimate of smell loss was 77% when assessed through objective measurements (95% CI of 61.4-89.2%) and 45% with subjective measurements (95% CI of 31.1-58.5%). Objective measures are a more sensitive method to identify smell loss as a result of infection with SARS-CoV-2; the use of subjective measures, while expedient during the early stages of the pandemic, underestimates the true prevalence of smell loss.
严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(SARS-CoV-2)引发了2019冠状病毒病(COVID-19),目前已在全球感染了超过650万人。为应对这场大流行,众多研究试图确定该疾病的病因和症状。新出现的证据支持,新近出现的嗅觉丧失(完全失去嗅觉)和嗅觉减退(部分失去嗅觉)是COVID-19的症状,但关于嗅觉功能障碍的研究显示其患病率差异很大,从5%到98%不等。我们在PubMed/Medline和谷歌学术上用关键词“COVID-19”、“嗅觉”和/或“嗅觉功能”进行了检索。我们纳入了任何将嗅觉丧失量化为COVID-19症状的研究。根据用于测量嗅觉丧失的方法类型——如自我报告嗅觉丧失等主观测量方法与使用分级刺激的客观测量方法——对研究进行分组和比较,以确定患病率是否因方法类型而异。对于每项研究,根据嗅觉障碍率的点估计计算95%置信区间(CI)。我们从2020年1月16日至4月30日确诊的病例中收集了34篇将嗅觉丧失量化为COVID-19症状的文章。通过客观测量评估时,嗅觉丧失的合并患病率估计为77%(95%CI为61.4 - 89.2%),主观测量时为45%(95%CI为31.1 - 58.5%)。客观测量是识别因感染SARS-CoV-2导致嗅觉丧失的更敏感方法;主观测量方法虽然在大流行早期很便捷,但低估了嗅觉丧失的真实患病率。