Trajectory, healthcare utilisation and recovery in 3590 individuals with long covid: a 4-year prospective cohort analysis
Jai Prashar, Toby Hillman, Emma C Wall, Amanpreet Sarna, Emma Mi, Robert Bell, Jagdeep Sahota, Michael Zandi, Patricia McNamara, Rebecca Livingston, Rebecca Gore, Catherine Lunken, Elena Bax, Rachel Nyam, Amir Masood Rafie Manzelat, Lyth Hishmeh, Emily Attree, Stephen Cone

TL;DR
This study tracks recovery in 3590 long covid patients over 4 years, finding that only a third recover to 75% of their best health, with vaccination and fatigue levels influencing recovery.
Contribution
The study provides the largest single-center analysis of long covid recovery trajectories and identifies key predictors of recovery.
Findings
Only 33.4% of individuals recovered to >75% of their best health within 4 years.
Vaccinated individuals had faster recovery rates compared to unvaccinated individuals.
Fatigue severity, myalgia, and dysautonomic symptoms were inversely associated with recovery.
Abstract
To characterise long-term trajectory of recovery in individuals with long covid. Prospective cohort. Single-centre, specialist post-COVID service (London, UK). Individuals aged ≥18 years with long covid (hospitalised and non-hospitalised) from April 2020 to March 2024. Routine, prospectively collected data on symptoms, quality of life (including Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS) and EuroQol 5 Dimensions (EQ-5D), return to work status and healthcare utilisation (investigations, outpatient and emergency attendances). The primary outcome was recovery by self-reported >75% of ‘best health’ (EQ-5D Visual Analogue Scale) and was assessed using Cox proportional hazards regression models over 4 years. Linked National Health Service England registry data provided secondary care healthcare utilisation and expenditure. We included 3590 individuals (63.3% female, 73.5% non-hospitalised, median…
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Taxonomy
TopicsLong-Term Effects of COVID-19 · Intensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders · Fibromyalgia and Chronic Fatigue Syndrome Research
