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Long-term cognitive performance and its relation to anti-inflammatory therapy in a cohort of survivors of severe COVID-19, 2022, Duindam et al

Discussion in 'Long Covid research' started by Andy, Sep 27, 2022.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

    Messages:
    21,962
    Location:
    Hampshire, UK
    Highlights

    • Up to a third of survivors of severe COVID-19 develops long-term cognitive impairment.
    • Subjective cognitive complaints six months following severe COVID-19 do not correlate with objective cognitive impairment.
    • COVID-19 related immunomodulatory therapy is not associated with the overall incidence of cognitive dysfunction.

    Abstract

    Background and objectives
    Long-term cognitive performance data in former critically ill COVID-19 patients are sparse. Current evidence suggests that cognitive decline is related to neuroinflammation, which might be attenuated by COVID-19 related anti-inflammatory therapies. The objective of this prospective cohort study was to study long term cognitive outcomes following severe COVID-19 and the relation to anti-inflammatory therapies.

    Methods
    Prospective observational cohort of patients that survived an intensive care unit (ICU) admission due to severe COVID-19. Six months after hospital discharge, we extensively assessed both objective cognitive functioning and subjective cognitive complaints. Furthermore, patients were stratified in cohorts according to their anti-inflammatory treatment (i.e. no immunomodulatory therapy, dexamethasone, or both dexamethasone and interleukin-6 receptor antagonist tocilizumab).

    Results
    96 patients were included (March 2020–June 2021, median [IQR] age 61 [55–69] years). 91% received invasive mechanical ventilation, and mean ± SD severity-of-disease APACHE–II–score at admission was 15.8 ± 4.1. After 6.5 ± 1.3 months, 27% of patients scored cognitively impaired. Patients that did or did not develop cognitive impairments were similar in ICU-admission parameters, clinical course and delirium incidence. Patients with subjective cognitive complaints (20%) were more likely women (61% vs 26%), and had a shorter ICU stay (median [IQR] 8 [5–15] vs 18 [9–31], p = 0.002). Objective cognitive dysfunction did not correlate with subjective cognitive dysfunction. 27% of the participants received dexamethasone during intensive care admission, 44% received additional tocilizumab and 29% received neither. Overall occurrence and severity of cognitive dysfunction were not affected by anti-inflammatory therapy, although patients treated with both dexamethasone and tocilizumab had worse executive functioning scores (Trail Making Test interference) than patients without anti-inflammatory treatment (T-score 40.3 ± 13.5 vs 49.1 ± 9.3, p = 0.007).

    Discussion
    A relevant proportion of critically ill COVID-19 patients shows deficits in long-term cognitive functioning. Apart from more pronounced executive dysfunction, overall, anti-inflammatory therapy appeared not to affect long-term cognitive performance. Our findings provide insight in long-term cognitive outcomes in patients who survived COVID-19, that may facilitate health-care providers counseling patients and their caregivers.

    Open access, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S266635462200103X
     
    Peter Trewhitt likes this.
  2. Denise

    Denise Senior Member (Voting Rights)

    Messages:
    472
    "Well sure, they have executive dysfunction, but really that's such a trivial thing.... "
    Haven't read the article so I don't know what sort of counseling they are talking about... (BPS or counseling to refer to specialty practitioners?)
     

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