Clustering analysis reveals different profiles associating long-term post-COVID symptoms, COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission and previous medical co …

C Fernández-de-Las-Peñas, JD Martín-Guerrero… - Infection, 2023 - Springer
C Fernández-de-Las-Peñas, JD Martín-Guerrero, LL Florencio, E Navarro-Pardo
Infection, 2023Springer
Purpose To identify subgroups of COVID-19 survivors exhibiting long-term post-COVID
symptoms according to clinical/hospitalization data by using cluster analysis in order to
foresee the illness progress and facilitate subsequent prognosis. Methods Age, gender,
height, weight, pre-existing medical comorbidities, Internal Care Unit (ICU) admission, days
at hospital, and presence of COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission were collected from
hospital records in a sample of patients recovered from COVID-19 at five hospitals in Madrid …
Purpose
To identify subgroups of COVID-19 survivors exhibiting long-term post-COVID symptoms according to clinical/hospitalization data by using cluster analysis in order to foresee the illness progress and facilitate subsequent prognosis.
Methods
Age, gender, height, weight, pre-existing medical comorbidities, Internal Care Unit (ICU) admission, days at hospital, and presence of COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission were collected from hospital records in a sample of patients recovered from COVID-19 at five hospitals in Madrid (Spain). A predefined list of post-COVID symptoms was systematically assessed a mean of 8.4 months (SD 15.5) after hospital discharge. Anxiety/depressive levels and sleep quality were assessed with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, respectively. Cluster analysis was used to identify groupings of COVID-19 patients without introducing any previous assumptions, yielding three different clusters associating post-COVID symptoms with acute COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission.
Results
Cluster 2 grouped subjects with lower prevalence of medical co-morbidities, lower number of COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission, lower number of post-COVID symptoms, and almost no limitations with daily living activities when compared to the others. In contrast, individuals in cluster 0 and 1 exhibited higher number of pre-existing medical co-morbidities, higher number of COVID-19 symptoms at hospital admission, higher number of long-term post-COVID symptoms (particularly fatigue, dyspnea and pain), more limitations on daily living activities, higher anxiety and depressive levels, and worse sleep quality than those in cluster 2.
Conclusions
The identified subgrouping may reflect different mechanisms which should be considered in therapeutic interventions.
Springer
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