Deep Digital Phenotyping Research Unit, Department of Precision Health, Luxembourg Institute of Health, Strassen, Luxembourg.
UNAIDS, Yangon, Myanmar.
Front Public Health. 2023 Mar 16;11:1055440. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2023.1055440. eCollection 2023.
Psychological disturbances are frequent following COVID-19. However, there is not much information about whether pre-existing psychological disorders are associated with the severity and evolution of COVID-19. We aimed to explore the associations between regular psychotropic medication use (PM) before infection as a proxy for mood or anxiety disorders with COVID-19 recovery trajectories. We used data from the Predi-COVID study. We followed adults, tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 and collected demographics, clinical characteristics, comorbidities and daily symptoms 14 days after inclusion. We calculated a score based on 16 symptoms and modeled latent class trajectories. We performed polynomial logistic regression with PM as primary exposure and the different trajectories as outcome. We included 791 participants, 51% were men, and 5.3% reported regular PM before infection. We identified four trajectories characterizing recovery dynamics: "Almost asymptomatic," "Quick recovery," "Slow recovery," and "Persisting symptoms". With a fully adjusted model for age, sex, socioeconomic, lifestyle and comorbidity, we observed associations between PM with the risks of being in more severe trajectories than "Almost Asymptomatic": "Quick recovery" (relative risk (95% confidence intervals) 3.1 (2.7, 3.4), "Slow recovery" 5.2 (3.0, 9.2), and "Persisting symptoms"11.7 (6.9, 19.6) trajectories. We observed a gradient of risk between PM before the infection and the risk of slow or no recovery in the first 14 days. These results suggest that a pre-existing psychological condition increases the risk of a poorer evolution of COVID-19 and may increase the risk of Long COVID. Our findings can help to personalize the care of people with COVID-19.
心理障碍在 COVID-19 后很常见。然而,关于先前存在的心理障碍是否与 COVID-19 的严重程度和演变有关,信息并不多。我们旨在探讨感染前定期使用精神药物(PM)作为情绪或焦虑障碍的替代指标与 COVID-19 恢复轨迹之间的关联。我们使用了 Prei-COVID 研究的数据。我们随访了成年人,SARS-CoV-2 检测呈阳性,并在纳入后 14 天收集了人口统计学、临床特征、合并症和日常症状。我们根据 16 个症状计算了一个评分,并对潜在类别轨迹进行建模。我们使用 PM 作为主要暴露因素和不同轨迹作为结果进行多项式逻辑回归。我们纳入了 791 名参与者,其中 51%为男性,5.3%在感染前报告定期使用 PM。我们确定了四个特征恢复动态的轨迹:“几乎无症状”、“快速恢复”、“缓慢恢复”和“持续症状”。在针对年龄、性别、社会经济、生活方式和合并症进行完全调整的模型中,我们观察到 PM 与处于比“几乎无症状”更严重轨迹的风险之间存在关联:“快速恢复”(相对风险(95%置信区间)为 3.1(2.7, 3.4),“缓慢恢复”为 5.2(3.0, 9.2),“持续症状”为 11.7(6.9, 19.6)。我们观察到感染前 PM 与前 14 天内恢复缓慢或无恢复的风险之间存在风险梯度。这些结果表明,先前存在的心理状况会增加 COVID-19 恶化的风险,并可能增加长新冠的风险。我们的研究结果可以帮助为 COVID-19 患者提供个性化护理。