Persistent neuropsychiatric symptoms after COVID-19: a systematic review and meta-analysis

The nature and extent of persistent neuropsychiatric symptoms after COVID-19 are not established. To help inform mental health service planning in the pandemic recovery phase, we systematically determined the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in survivors of COVID-19. <br> For this pre-r...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Badenoch, J, Rengesamy, E, Watson, C, Jansen, K, Chakraborty, S, Sundaram, R, Hafeez, D, Burchill, E, Saini, A, Thomas, L, Cross, B, Hunt, C, Conti, I, Ralovska, S, Hussain, Z, Butler, M, Pollak, T, Koychev, I, Michael, B, Holling, H, Rogers, J, Rooney, A
Other Authors: SARS-CoV-Neuro Collaboration
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Oxford University Press 2021
Description
Summary:The nature and extent of persistent neuropsychiatric symptoms after COVID-19 are not established. To help inform mental health service planning in the pandemic recovery phase, we systematically determined the prevalence of neuropsychiatric symptoms in survivors of COVID-19. <br> For this pre-registered systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO ID CRD42021239750) we searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL and PsycINFO to 20th February 2021, plus our own curated database. We included peer-reviewed studies reporting neuropsychiatric symptoms at post-acute or later time-points after COVID-19 infection, and in control groups where available. For each study a minimum of two authors extracted summary data. For each symptom we calculated a primary pooled prevalence using generalised linear mixed models. Heterogeneity was measured with I 2. Subgroup analyses were conducted for COVID-19 hospitalisation, severity, and duration of follow-up. <br> From 2,844 unique titles we included 51 studies (n=18,917 patients). The mean duration of follow-up after COVID-19 was 77 days (range 14-182 days). Study quality was most commonly moderate. The most prevalent neuropsychiatric symptom was sleep disturbance (pooled prevalence=27·4% [95%CI 21·4-34·4%]), followed by fatigue (24·4% [17·5-32·9%]), objective cognitive impairment (20·2% [10·3-35·7%]), anxiety (19·1%[13·3-26·8%]), and post-traumatic stress (15·7% [9·9-24·1%]). Only two studies reported symptoms in control groups, both reporting higher frequencies in COVID-19 survivors versus controls. Between-study heterogeneity was high (I 2=79·6%-98·6%). There was little or no evidence of differential symptom prevalence based on hospitalisation status, severity, or follow-up duration. <br> Neuropsychiatric symptoms are common and persistent after recovery from COVID-19. The literature on longer-term consequences is still maturing, but indicates a particularly high prevalence of insomnia, fatigue, cognitive impairment, and anxiety disorders in the first six months after infection.