key: cord-0883728-z55gpwxy authors: Rass, Verena; Beer, Ronny; Schiefecker, Alois Josef; Lindner, Anna; Kofler, Mario; Ianosi, Bogdan Andrei; Mahlknecht, Philipp; Heim, Beatrice; Peball, Marina; Carbone, Federico; Limmert, Victoria; Kindl, Philipp; Putnina, Lauma; Fava, Elena; Sahanic, Sabina; Sonnweber, Thomas; Löscher, Wolfgang N.; Wanschitz, Julia V.; Zamarian, Laura; Djamshidian, Atbin; Tancevski, Ivan; Weiss, Günter; Bellmann‐Weiler, Rosa; Kiechl, Stefan; Seppi, Klaus; Loeffler‐Ragg, Judith; Pfausler, Bettina; Helbok, Raimund title: Neurological outcomes 1 year after COVID‐19 diagnosis: A prospective longitudinal cohort study date: 2022-03-23 journal: Eur J Neurol DOI: 10.1111/ene.15307 sha: 506dc95766ac49b895ee30a7235ffdb12f5a4464 doc_id: 883728 cord_uid: z55gpwxy BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Neurological sequelae from coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19) may persist after recovery from acute infection. Here, the aim was to describe the natural history of neurological manifestations over 1 year after COVID‐19. METHODS: A prospective, multicentre, longitudinal cohort study in COVID‐19 survivors was performed. At a 3‐month and 1‐year follow‐up, patients were assessed for neurological impairments by a neurological examination and a standardized test battery including the assessment of hyposmia (16‐item Sniffin' Sticks test), cognitive deficits (Montreal Cognitive Assessment < 26) and mental health (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and Post‐traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist 5). RESULTS: Eighty‐one patients were evaluated 1 year after COVID‐19, out of which 76 (94%) patients completed a 3‐month and 1‐year follow‐up. Patients were 54 (47–64) years old and 59% were male. New and persistent neurological disorders were found in 15% (3 months) and 12% (10/81; 1 year). Symptoms at 1‐year follow‐up were reported by 48/81 (59%) patients, including fatigue (38%), concentration difficulties (25%), forgetfulness (25%), sleep disturbances (22%), myalgia (17%), limb weakness (17%), headache (16%), impaired sensation (16%) and hyposmia (15%). Neurological examination revealed findings in 52/81 (64%) patients without improvement over time (3 months, 61%, p = 0.230) including objective hyposmia (Sniffin' Sticks test <13; 51%). Cognitive deficits were apparent in 18%, whereas signs of depression, anxiety and post‐traumatic stress disorders were found in 6%, 29% and 10% respectively 1 year after infection. These mental and cognitive disorders had not improved after the 3‐month follow‐up (all p > 0.05). CONCLUSION: Our data indicate that a significant patient number still suffer from neurological sequelae including neuropsychiatric symptoms 1 year after COVID‐19 calling for interdisciplinary management of these patients. Neurological complications associated with acute coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) are well described [1] . Now, increasing evidence suggests that symptoms may persist even beyond 4-12 weeks after disease onset [2] . Apart from pulmonary and other organ manifestations, post-COVID neurological symptoms have captured the interest of national societies and individual research groups [3] [4] [5] . Frequent neurological, cognitive and neuropsychiatric long-term symptoms after COVID-19 include but are not limited to headache, dizziness, difficulty in concentration, attention and memory, fatigue, insomnia, depression and anxiety [6] . In line with this, a meta-analysis including 15 follow-up studies of COVID-19 patients evaluated between 14 and 110 days post-infection, identified 55 long-term effects of COVID-19 with fatigue, headache, attention disorder, hair loss and dyspnoea as the most common symptoms [7] . Point-prevalence studies commonly miss the dynamic evolution of symptoms and diseases over time and vary depending on the study design and the cohorts studied [5] . In a recent observational study including 1276 hospitalized patients, 68% reported at least one sequela 6 months after the acute infection with further improvement at the 1-year follow-up (49%) [8] . Fatigue (20%) and sleep disorders (17%) were the most prevalent neurological symptoms, and anxiety as well as depression affected 26% of patients at the 1-year follow-up [8] . Recently, a point-prevalence study of neurological manifestations 3 months after acute disease in 135 COVID-19 survivors was reported [4] . Accounting for pre-existing neurological diseases, every sixth patient was diagnosed with a neurological disease, which was directly associated with COVID-19 disease severity. Persistent hyposmia assessed with a licensed smelling test was common (45%), even in patients recovering from mild disease [4] . In the current study, the aim was to assess this prospective consecutive cohort again 12 months after disease onset, describing the natural history of neurological signs, symptoms and diseases as well as neurocognitive and neuropsychiatric complaints. As secondary objectives, the aim was to find predictors of persisting olfactory dysfunction, anxiety or depression, cognitive deficits and fatigue. It was hypothesized that neurological outcomes improved over time in a substantial number of patients. patients prospectively included in this multicentre observational cohort study were recruited at three sites in Tyrol upon disease onset (Department of Internal Medicine II, Medical University of Innsbruck, the tertiary care centre Zams and the acute rehabilitation facility Münster). Recruited patients were diagnosed with COVID-19 between March and June 2020. To this date, no variants of Sars-CoV-2 were reported. Details are given in our previous studies [4, 9] . Study inclusion criteria were (1) confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection, (2) hospitalization or outpatient management with symptoms persisting for at least 6 weeks after initial COVID-19 diagnosis and (3) age greater ≥18 years. Patients who died during the acute phase were not included in this study, and the intensive care unit (ICU) mortality rate was 19% during the acute phase of the study as reported elsewhere [10] . Only some of these patients were evaluated for neurological complications during the acute disease. The local ethics committee approved the conduct of the study (Medical University of Innsbruck, EK No. 1103/2020) and the study was registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT05025839). Written informed consent was obtained from all patients according to local regulations. Detailed data collection procedures at the 3-month follow-up are described elsewhere [4, 9] . In brief, all patients received a cardiopulmonary 3-month follow-up including clinical examination, standard laboratory examinations and a low-dose computed tomography (CT) scan of the chest. The patients also underwent a 3-month neurological examination consisting of a structured interview, olfactory testing, cognitive testing and assessment of anxiety, depression as well as quality of life. At the 1-year follow-up, patients underwent the same test battery. A detailed interview was performed to assess the frequency of self-perceived sequelae including 16 symptoms and their evolution over time (any time, ≥4 weeks, ≥3 months, ongoing). The standardized neurological examination to assess neurological signs or diseases was done by neurological consultants or registrars under the direct supervision of a consultant. To assess the olfactory function, the 16-item Sniffin' Sticks identification test (SS-16; Burghart Medizintechnik) was used: the nasal chemosensory performance was evaluated using pen-like odour dispensing devices for odour identification of 16 common odorants (multiple forced-choice from four verbal items per test odorant) [11] . Hyposmia and anosmia were determined using cut-off levels of <13 and <9 respectively, as per manufacturer criteria. Cognitive deficits were screened for using the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and impairment was classified in patients scoring below 26/30 points [12] . Post-traumatic stress, depression and anxiety were captured with the Post-traumatic Stress Disorder Checklist 5 (PCL-5) [13] and Fatigue was assessed by self-report (yes/no) and by use of the fatigue assessment scale (FAS) and the fatigue severity scale (FSS). The FAS is a 10-item questionnaire to assess mental (five questions) and physical (five questions) fatigue with each question scoring from 1 to 5. By summing up the points on all questions, the total score ranges from 10 to 50. A total FAS score >21 indicates fatigue [16] . The FSS contains nine questions that rate the severity of fatigue symptoms based on a 7-point Likert scale [17] . The total FSS score represents the mean sum of the nine items, therefore ranging between 1 and 7. A mean FSS score ≥5 indicates clinically significant fatigue [18] . parametric or non-parametric tests were applied. The chi-squared or Kruskal-Wallis test was used to assess for differences across severity grades (Tables S1-S3). To assess independent predictors of objective hyposmia (SS-16 <13), impaired cognition (MoCA <26), signs of anxiety or depression, or fatigue (FAS >21) at the 1-year follow-up, multivariable logistic regression analysis was employed. For model selection, a multi-step approach was used. Out of a total of 64 variables including demographics, premedical history, symptoms/treatments during acute disease, laboratory parameters, neurological/neuropsychiatric signs or diseases, cardiopulmonary symptoms and CT abnormalities obtained at the 3-month follow-up, variables were selected to build our full models. The initial selection was based on variable importance using the random forest package for R (version 4. [6] [7] [8] [9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14] . Thereby, the first 10 variables which produced the most decrease in model accuracy and the first 10 that produced a decrease of Gini impurity were pre-selected. Then, a stepwise forward and backward selection based on the Akaike information criterion (AIC) of generalized linear models was used and collinear factors based on the variance inflation factor were excluded. For this analysis, the R package MASS (version 7.3-53.1) was used with the StepAIC function and adjusted odds ratios were calculated with 95% confidence intervals. Missing data were indicated for descriptive analysis and imputed using multiple imputations based on random forests with the missForest package for R (version 1.4). The vast majority of imputed variables were categorical and had less than 15% missing values. A two-sided p value <0.05 was considered statistically significant. All analyses were performed with SPSS (IBM SPSS Statistics, Version 24.0) and R. In total, 76 of 135 patients who presented at the 3-month follow-up completed the 1-year follow-up. In addition five patients who were evaluated at 1 year only were recruited, resulting in a total of 81 patients who completed in-person follow-up 1 year after COVID-19 diagnosis (median 416 days, interquartile range 401-437). The median age was 54 (47-64) years, and the majority were male patients (59%). All initial severity grades were included, reflected by the necessity of ICU care (n = 20/81, 25%), the requirement for admission to the normal hospital ward (n = 35/81, 43%) and outpatients (n = 26/81, 32%) ( Table 1) . There was no difference in demographics and disease severity in patients completing consecutive follow-ups (3 months and 1 year) and those only seen at 3 months (disease severity, p = 0.116; age, p = 0.103; sex, p = 0.860). At least one neurological disease not diagnosed prior to COVID-19 was found in 10/81 patients (12%) at the 1-year follow-up: neuropathy/myopathy in eight patients (distal symmetric axonal neuropathy The majority (48/81, 59%) reported at least one persisting neurological symptom 1 year after COVID-19 diagnosis: these included fatigue (38%), concentration difficulties (25%), forgetfulness (25%), sleep disturbance (22%), myalgia (17%), limb weakness (17%), headache (16%), impaired sensation (16%), hyposmia (15%), vertigo/dizziness (12%), hypogeusia (9%), difficulties with walking/falls (7%) and tinnitus (5%). In Figure 2 neurological symptoms are quantified TA B L E 1 Demographics, comorbidities and therapy in 81 patients according to COVID-19 severity it was probably attributed to COVID-19; these symptoms included rigidity and reduced proprioception (hyposmia excluded). The only independent associated factor with objective hyposmia (Figure 3b ). Mechanical ventilation during the acute phase (adjOR 6.13, 95% Reduced proprioception 20 (15) 14 (17 [20] . Sustained organ dysfunction involving the heart, lung and kidney are postulated to trigger chronic fatigue [22] . Accordingly, it was found that dyspnoea at the 3-month follow-up and pulmonary disease in premedical history were associated with persistent fatigue at 1 year. Another hypothesis is based on an ongoing low-grade (neuro)-inflammation after acute symptomatic COVID-19. Neuroinflammation may be triggered by the virus itself [23] or by systemic inflammation activating the innate immune system in the brain and by up-regulation of various cytokines [24] . This can impact on neurotransmitter synthesis specifically tryptophan degradation and subsequently limited serotonin synthesis [25] . In our cohort, systemic inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein or interleukin-6 being associated with fatigue could not be confirmed; however, local-regional low-grade immune activation in the central nervous system may not be reflected by alterations of circulating markers of inflammation. Interestingly, impaired cognition was associated with fatigue and may refer to the common symptom of mild cognitive impairment in patients with fatigue [19] . *McNemar or paired t tests were used to assess for differences across the 3-month and 1-year follow-up.; **For missing values at 3-month follow-up see [5] . Cognitive impairment, objectively assessed using the MoCA, was prevalent in 23% after 3 months and 18% after 1 year, whilst even more patients (25%) reported persistent forgetfulness and concentration difficulties 1 year after acute COVID-19. Several authors postulate that systemic infection and neuroinflammation may promote cognitive decline or even neurodegeneration after COVID-19 [19, 26, 27] . This hypothesis is also supported by the association between inflammatory markers (e.g., procalcitonin and interleukin-6) with hippocampal atrophy in patients with severe sepsis [28] . Moreover, moderate to severe cognitive impairment was observed in survivors of severe sepsis even 8 years after acute disease [29] . In our cohort, persistently elevated ferritin levels 3 months after acute COVID-19 were associated with impaired cognition. Ferritin is a well-known marker of inflammation [30] , and hyperferritinemia as a manifestation of a hyperinflammatory state has been described in COVID-19 patients [31] being associated with a more severe course of the infection [32] . Accordingly, hyperferritinemia was associated with persisting lung pathologies 60 days post COVID-19 and correlated with increased cytokine mRNA expression in peripheral blood cells of patients [33] . Along this line, impaired lung function 3 months after acute COVID-19 was identified as a risk factor for cognitive deficits at 1-year follow-up, which would also point to inflammation and radical mediated neurological damage and hormone dysfunction. Patients with SARS-CoV-2 lung injury are further at risk of hypoxaemia and acidaemia, which may result in cerebral vasodilation, brain oedema formation and neuronal injury [34] . In encephalopathic COVID-19 patients with acute respiratory distress syndrome, cerebral magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilateral frontotemporal hypoperfusion [35] . In addition, active smoking as another established risk factor in this study may favour oxidative stress, chronic inflammation and microvascular thrombosis, and was recently suggested to play a causal role for COVID-19 severity [36] . Mental health disorders such as anxiety, depressed mood and PTSD were high in our cohort without significant improvement over time. Both disease-specific mechanisms and restrictions in the individual's life during the pandemic with a recent decline of global mental health [37] may serve as an explanation. Whilst the latter could not be adjusted for, it was found that mechanical ventilation during acute COVID-19 and pathological findings on the chest CT scan obtained at the 3-month follow-up were associated with anxiety or depression after 1 year. Neuropsychiatric symptoms including anxiety, depression and PTSDs are common in ICU survivors irrespective of COVID-19 [38] . The identified risk factors in our study, which are associated with a more severe disease course, impose a higher likelihood of chronic complaints, which limit full recovery and trigger physical and mental illness. It should be emphasized that most of the identified diseases were mild. Although a significant improvement in prevalence rates of neurological diseases could not be shown, individual patients recovered, especially those with CIP/CIM, underlining the importance of neurorehabilitation in severe COVID-19 patients. Similarly, positioningrelated peripheral nerve injury was alleviated in one patient [39] . There are insufficient data of other infectious diseases to be compared to long-term neurological deficits as described in our study. This is also true for patients with influenza, where various neurological complications are described during the acute and post-acute phase especially in children [40] ; however, reports on long-term neurological sequelae are lacking. In a recent large retrospective International Classification of Diseases tenth revision (ICD-10) based study, higher rates of neurological and psychiatric diagnoses were described within 6 months after COVID-19 compared to patients with influenza including intracranial haemorrhage, ischaemic stroke, parkinsonism, dementia or anxiety disorder [41] A high prevalence of neurological signs was found in the detailed neurological evaluation (64% when including objective hyposmia), where improvement in individuals was as frequent as the observation of a new finding. Objective hyposmia was highly prevalent (51%) and comparable to 3-month follow-up (45%). Olfactory dysfunction may be a consequence of either upper respiratory epithelial cell injury including blocking of the olfactory cleft or neuronal cell damage leading to structural abnormalities of the olfactory bulb, primary olfactory cortex or secondary projection areas [42] . In this context, it is important to keep in mind that 22% of the general population are considered to have olfactory dysfunction [43] , which is even higher when using objective measures compared to subjective measures. This may to some extent explain the discrepancy of objective hyposmia and perceived new hyposmia secondary to COVID-19 (15%). The only factor that predicted objective hyposmia at the 1-year follow-up was advanced age. Independent of COVID-19, olfactory function decreases with age [11] . Because odour identification (used by us) and odour discrimination declined to a lesser extent compared to odour thresholds, it was decided to use a uniform established cut- Secondly, due to the low patient numbers significant improvements may have been missed. Thirdly, a relatively high drop-out rate was encountered at 12 months (44%); however, the patients were comparable in terms of disease severity and age, minimizing the risk of a substantial selection bias. Two patients died between hospital discharge and 12-month follow-up secondary to traumatic brain injury and acute myeloid leukaemia. Next, patients who died during the acute phase (19%) were not systematically assessed for neurological complications. Our study suggests a high prevalence of neurological and neuropsychiatric sequelae 1 year after COVID-19 with 12% having a new onset neurological disease within 12 months post-COVID. The most common symptom described was fatigue, independent of COVID-19 disease severity. Our data underline the high global post-acute disease burden calling for long-term multidisciplinary management of these patients. All physicians and nurses involved in the acute care management of COVID-19 patients in Innsbruck, Zams and Muenster are thanked. Conceptualization (equal); data curation (equal); writing-review and editing (equal) Guenter Weiss: Supervision (equal); writing-review and editing (equal). 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Additional supporting information may be found in the online version of the article at the publisher's website.