National Institute on Drug Dependence and Beijing Key Laboratory of Drug Dependence, Peking University, Beijing, China.
School of Public Health, Peking University, Beijing, China.
Mol Psychiatry. 2023 Jan;28(1):423-433. doi: 10.1038/s41380-022-01614-7. Epub 2022 Jun 6.
The long-term physical and mental sequelae of COVID-19 are a growing public health concern, yet there is considerable uncertainty about their prevalence, persistence and predictors. We conducted a comprehensive, up-to-date meta-analysis of survivors' health consequences and sequelae for COVID-19. PubMed, Embase and the Cochrane Library were searched through Sep 30th, 2021. Observational studies that reported the prevalence of sequelae of COVID-19 were included. Two reviewers independently undertook the data extraction and quality assessment. Of the 36,625 records identified, a total of 151 studies were included involving 1,285,407 participants from thirty-two countries. At least one sequelae symptom occurred in 50.1% (95% CI 45.4-54.8) of COVID-19 survivors for up to 12 months after infection. The most common investigation findings included abnormalities on lung CT (56.9%, 95% CI 46.2-67.3) and abnormal pulmonary function tests (45.6%, 95% CI 36.3-55.0), followed by generalized symptoms, such as fatigue (28.7%, 95% CI 21.0-37.0), psychiatric symptoms (19.7%, 95% CI 16.1-23.6) mainly depression (18.3%, 95% CI 13.3-23.8) and PTSD (17.9%, 95% CI 11.6-25.3), and neurological symptoms (18.7%, 95% CI 16.2-21.4), such as cognitive deficits (19.7%, 95% CI 8.8-33.4) and memory impairment (17.5%, 95% CI 8.1-29.6). Subgroup analysis showed that participants with a higher risk of long-term sequelae were older, mostly male, living in a high-income country, with more severe status at acute infection. Individuals with severe infection suffered more from PTSD, sleep disturbance, cognitive deficits, concentration impairment, and gustatory dysfunction. Survivors with mild infection had high burden of anxiety and memory impairment after recovery. Our findings suggest that after recovery from acute COVID-19, half of survivors still have a high burden of either physical or mental sequelae up to at least 12 months. It is important to provide urgent and appropriate prevention and intervention management to preclude persistent or emerging long-term sequelae and to promote the physical and psychiatric wellbeing of COVID-19 survivors.
COVID-19 的长期身心后遗症是一个日益严重的公共卫生问题,但对于其流行率、持续性和预测因素仍存在相当大的不确定性。我们对 COVID-19 幸存者的健康后果和后遗症进行了全面的、最新的荟萃分析。通过 2021 年 9 月 30 日,检索了 PubMed、Embase 和 Cochrane 图书馆。纳入了报告 COVID-19 后遗症患病率的观察性研究。两名审查员独立进行了数据提取和质量评估。在 36625 条记录中,共有 151 项研究纳入了来自 32 个国家的 1285407 名参与者。感染后长达 12 个月,COVID-19 幸存者中至少有一种后遗症症状的发生率为 50.1%(95%CI 45.4-54.8)。最常见的检查结果包括肺部 CT 异常(56.9%,95%CI 46.2-67.3)和肺功能检查异常(45.6%,95%CI 36.3-55.0),其次是全身性症状,如疲劳(28.7%,95%CI 21.0-37.0)、精神症状(19.7%,95%CI 16.1-23.6)主要是抑郁(18.3%,95%CI 13.3-23.8)和 PTSD(17.9%,95%CI 11.6-25.3),以及神经系统症状(18.7%,95%CI 16.2-21.4),如认知缺陷(19.7%,95%CI 8.8-33.4)和记忆障碍(17.5%,95%CI 8.1-29.6)。亚组分析表明,有长期后遗症高风险的参与者年龄较大,主要为男性,居住在高收入国家,急性感染时病情更严重。感染严重的患者更容易患 PTSD、睡眠障碍、认知缺陷、注意力障碍和味觉障碍。轻度感染的幸存者在康复后仍有较高的焦虑和记忆障碍负担。我们的研究结果表明,在急性 COVID-19 康复后,至少在 12 个月内,仍有一半的幸存者存在身体或精神后遗症的高负担。为了预防持续性或新出现的长期后遗症,促进 COVID-19 幸存者的身心健康,迫切需要提供紧急和适当的预防和干预管理。