Children and young people with persistent post-COVID-19 condition over 24 months: a mixed-methods study.

IF 2.3 4区 医学 Q2 PEDIATRICS
Esther Ortega-Martin, Alvin Richards-Belle, Fiona Newlands, Roz Shafran, Terence Stephenson, Natalia Rojas, Neha Batura, Marta Buszewicz, Emma Dalrymple, Isobel Heyman, Snehal M Pinto Pereira
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Abstract

Purpose: While most children and young people (CYP) recover from COVID-19, some develop 'post-COVID-19 condition' (PCC), affecting their health and well-being. We explored (1) whether distinct persistent PCC symptom subgroups exist in CYP and whether these subgroups remain stable up to 24 months postinfection; (2) whether impairments differ across subgroups and (3) how CYP with persistent PCC describe the evolving impact of the pandemic/lockdowns on their health and experiences up to 24 months postinfection.

Methods: A cohort of CYP across England was recruited in 2020-2021 (the children and young people with Long COVID study). A subsample of 68 CYP meeting the PCC Delphi research definition at 3, 6, 12 and 24 months post-PCR-confirmed infection was analysed. Latent class analysis identified symptom subgroups (objective 1); associations with impairments (measured via EuroQol Five Dimensions Youth) were examined (objective 2). Free-text responses from six CYP at all four follow-up points (n=24) were thematically analysed to capture evolving experiences (objective 3).

Results: Included CYP were older (72.1% were 15-17 years), female (82.4%) and white (80.9%). Two symptom groups emerged: a frequent symptom subgroup (median: 6.5-9 symptoms over time, mainly shortness of breath and tiredness); and a less frequent symptom subgroup (median: 4-5 symptoms, mostly tiredness). Generally, no association was found between symptom subgroups and impairments. Qualitative analysis indicated feelings of anxiety, respiratory problems and concerns around relaxation of lockdown restrictions persisted over follow-up. School-related worries were transient.

Discussion: Even CYP with persistent PCC characterised by fewer symptoms experience long-term anxiety and impact, emphasising even few symptoms can be debilitating and underscoring the need for personalised PCC management for CYP.

covid -19后病情持续超过24个月的儿童和年轻人:一项混合方法研究
目的:虽然大多数儿童和青少年(CYP)从COVID-19中恢复过来,但有些人会出现“COVID-19后症状”(PCC),影响他们的健康和福祉。我们探讨了(1)在CYP中是否存在不同的持续性PCC症状亚组,以及这些亚组在感染后24个月是否保持稳定;(2)不同亚组的损伤是否不同;(3)持续性PCC的CYP如何描述大流行/封锁对其健康和感染后24个月的经历的不断变化的影响。方法:在2020-2021年招募英格兰各地的CYP队列(长期COVID研究的儿童和年轻人)。在pcr确诊感染后3、6、12和24个月,对68例符合PCC德尔菲研究定义的CYP进行亚样本分析。潜在类分析确定症状亚组(目标1);检查与损伤的关联(通过EuroQol五维度青年测量)(目标2)。在所有四个随访点(n=24),对六个CYP的自由文本回复进行主题分析,以捕捉不断发展的经验(目标3)。结果:纳入的CYP以年龄较大(15 ~ 17岁占72.1%)、女性(82.4%)、白人(80.9%)为主。出现了两个症状组:频繁症状亚组(随着时间的推移,中位数:6.5-9种症状,主要是呼吸短促和疲倦);还有一个不太常见的症状亚组(中位数:4-5种症状,主要是疲劳)。一般来说,症状亚组和损伤之间没有关联。定性分析表明,在随访期间,焦虑感、呼吸问题和对放松封锁限制的担忧持续存在。与学校有关的担忧是暂时的。讨论:即使是以症状较少为特征的持续性PCC的CYP也会经历长期的焦虑和影响,强调即使没有症状也会使人虚弱,并强调需要个性化的CYP PCC管理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMJ Paediatrics Open
BMJ Paediatrics Open Medicine-Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
3.80%
发文量
124
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