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"Long-COVID'' (also known as post-COVID-19 syndrome, post-acute sequelae of COVID-19, or chronic COVID syndrome, used here as 'Long-COVID' for brevity), is a complex array of postconvalescence symptoms following SARS-CoV-2 infection. The syndrome, common in COVID-19 survivors, can affect every organ system through as-yet uncharacterised but presumed immunological mechanisms. Prevalence depends on the definition used and time-period of follow-up, as well as the population being studied. The syndrome has been associated with significant and persistent disability in some survivors but has been hampered, until recently, by lack of a clinical definition, diagnostic criteria, and objective measures of disease or disability [1]. A Delphi-informed initial World Health Organisation (WHO) clinical definition was released in early October 2021 but has attracted much criticism from both clinicians and survivors for a host of reasons, ranging from a lack of precision to a lack of inclusion [2].
Further complicating the syndrome is the context in which the SARS-CoV-2 epidemic occurred, which was associated with severe lockdowns in many countries (including South Africa) with social isolation, widespread fear and disinformation, widespread economic hardship, and loss of family and acquaintances, all of which contribute to symptoms (psychiatric and sleep disturbances, pain, and other syndromes) reported to be associated with Long-COVID. Finally, many Long-COVID symptoms overlap with those seen in patients hospitalised for any severe illness, especially those admitted to intensive care and ventilated. However, the proliferation of literature reporting associations of Long-COVID symptoms with more severe COVID-19 disease, and objective immunological, radiological, and organ-specific dysfunction in those reporting symptoms, suggests that the entity is real. The pathogenesis of Long-COVID is poorly understood, but this association with more severe disease - where immune dysregulation plays a major role in those with hospitalization, respiratory failure, and death - suggests an immune-mediated inflammatory dysfunction that may impact all organs [3-14].
The sheer rapidity of four major infection waves in South Africa, the initial focus on containing the hospital burden of those with severe illness, and subsequent emphasis on the roll-out of a mass vaccination program, has left little space for studying SARS-COV-2 sequalae in survivors. This group, loosely and inaccurately termed "recovered'' in South African reporting, were largely unvaccinated or partly vaccinated at the time of infection, leaving them at risk of developing Long-COVID.
Full description
This is a single-centre, follow-up, observational, cross-sectional study of four distinct, longitudinal cohorts. Extensive clinical history will be obtained from each participant, and symptom questionnaire characterisation of Long-COVID (with a strong focus on organ-specific dysfunction, psychiatric, sleep, and pain parameters - all of which appear to be major features of Long-COVID), as well as laboratory and genetic characterisation will be performed. A subset of each cohort will be randomly selected for more specific syndrome characterisation related to sleep and pain, respiratory, cardiology, renal and glucose metabolism.
The consequences of Long-COVID will be described and compared in four large, well-described clinical cohorts of African patients surviving SARS-CoV-2:
After obtaining informed consent from potential participants, a single cross-sectional, baseline visit will be conducted for each participant. Demographic data, clinical history (including COVID-19 history, targeted symptoms, and risk factors), COVID-19 vaccination dates (if administered), and details of previous and concomitant medications will be collected. Multiple questionnaires related to psychiatric screening, psychosocial factors, work function assessment, sleep quality, and pain assessment will be administered. Respiratory and cardiac function will be evaluated through a dyspnoea scale, walking test and an ECG. Laboratory evaluations will include a full blood count, serum chemistry, liver function tests, renal function assessment, inflammatory markers, and DNA extraction for genotyping. Blood and urine samples will be stored locally for possible future analysis. Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) testing will be performed for participants consenting to this optional assessment.
After the baseline visit, participants with Long-COVID will be identified using the WHO clinical definition and general health assessments [2]. Randomly selected sub-groups of participants with, and without, Long-COVID will be selected from each of the four cohorts for additional investigations through participation in the following sub-studies:
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400 participants in 4 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Nompumelelo Nzuza; Bukani X Dyariwe
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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