Poor Association Between Clinical Characteristics and Seropositivity in Children With Suspected [LC]—A Single-Centre Study, 2025, Olsson-Åkefeld et al

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Poor Association Between Clinical Characteristics and Seropositivity in Children With Suspected Long COVID—A Single-Centre Study

S. Olsson-Åkefeldt, J. Luthander, L. Anmyr, L. Villard, S. Arnason, M. K. Kemani, E. Wållgren, S. Röstlund, M. Tingborn, M. Pettersson, E. George, M. Ryd-Rinder, O. Hertting

Aim
We aimed to compare characteristics and clinical presentation of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) antibody positive or negative children attending a specialist outpatient clinic for suspected paediatric long COVID.

Methods
A cross-sectional study was conducted of 113 children and adolescents enrolled between 1 December 2020 to 14 September 2021 in a multidisciplinary programme. Clinical and epidemiological data were collected with standardised interviews and laboratory tests including SARS-CoV-2 spike antibody measurement.

Results
A serological link to SARS-CoV-2 infection was found in 52%. Most patients (94.7%) reported several symptoms. Fatigue, post-exertional malaise, dizziness, nausea, headache, and concentration difficulties were the most common. Seronegative children had a higher number of individual symptoms. School absence and drop-out from leisure activities was substantial in both groups with higher numbers for the seronegative group. Self-reported health was low in both groups.

Conclusion
Children attending a specialist paediatric long COVID clinic experienced multiple symptoms and poor self-reported health. The symptomatology was similar regardless of serological status, implying multifactorial causes. A multidisciplinary assessment of this cohort was essential considering the broad spectrum of symptoms displayed and their substantial impact on everyday functioning.

Link | PDF (Acta Paediatrica) [Open Access]
 
Additionally, it is well known that viruses other than SARS-CoV-2, like Epstein–Barr virus, can cause long-standing fatigue in children and adolescents [13]. We aimed to study if children with COVID-19 antibodies, differed from seronegative children in symptom characteristics, school attendance and self-reported health.

(…)

This study cohort comprised patients 0–18 years referred to a specialist outpatient clinic at Astrid Lindgren Children's Hospital in Stockholm, Sweden 1 December 2020 to 14 September 2021. All had long-term symptoms after suspected, probable or confirmed COVID-19 as classified by the World Health Organisation (WHO) case definition [15].

(…)

Our study had several limitations. Certain data on symptom characteristics were missing for some participants, making the data sets incomplete. This may have influenced the findings. Most evident is however that, since PCR was not readily used in the early phase of the pandemic, PCR data are lacking. Instead, we used the WHO Case definition for COVID-19. These criteria are more subjective and may not accurately define COVID-19 disease. All patients were tested for SARS-CoV-2 antibodies, which is suggested by Stephenson as part of the definition of long COVID if PCR or antigen testing is not available [11].

(…)

From supplement file 1:
Laboratory tests:
Blood: ESR, CRP, full blood count, white blood cells, TSH, T4, sodium, potassium, calcium, magnesium, phosphate, chloride, creatinine, urea, cystatin-C, albumin, AST, ALT, ALP, GT, bilirubin, LD, ferritin, CK, CKMB, troponin T, NT-proBNP, INR, fibrinogen, d-dimer

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Maybe the seronegative patients had EBV or another infection they didn’t test for? It’s reasonable to assume that parents or doctors assume they had Covid in the middle of a pandemic, even though they might have had something else. This is a massive source of selection bias because all the participants were referrals to a specialist clinic.

Of course they conclude that multidiciplinary approaches might be warranted..
 
Of course they conclude that multidiciplinary approaches might be warranted..

With the slightest possible nod to the reality that they actually had Covid (this was let-it rip Sweden after all) but didn't seroconvert. From Wikipedia

Sweden's unique response to the COVID-19 pandemic has been the subject of significant controversy in both domestic and international circles. Unlike most countries, which strongly recommended or introduced widespread sector closures, quarantining, and lockdown measures to curb the spread of the coronavirus disease 2019, the government of Sweden took a more lenient approach to the pandemic, prioritizing the economy and only pursuing social distancing measures such as bans on large gatherings and limited travel restrictions.

Children in our seronegative group may still have had COVID-19 but not seroconverted or may have had antibodies below detection level.

But no: apparently lock-downs.

Our findings may thus suggest that a considerable part of our patients under investigation for possible long COVID suffer from longterm symptoms due to other reasons than COVID-19.

For children and adolescents, the pandemic had a tremendous impact on daily life, including school attendance, social life, family interaction and leisure activities.
 
Seronegatively should not lead to an automatic assumption that the person did not have COVID-19.

Given that essentially everyone has had Covid at least once, seronegativity may turn out to be a risk factor for LC —

Divergent adaptive immune responses define two types of long COVID (2023, Frontiers in Immunology) —

Using highly sensitive antibody and T cell assays, we could document immunological signs of a previous SARS-CoV-2 infection in half of ELISA-seronegative long COVID patients, suggesting the presence of an insufficient antiviral adaptive response in this group.

Combining all 5 criteria (CD4, IgG, IgA, PCR, and clinical) showed that 82.6% of patients in the LC group had signs of a probable SARS-CoV-2 infection […] this analysis showed that a majority of seronegative long COVID patients were likely to have been infected by SARS-CoV-2

Clinical and serological predictors of post COVID-19 condition–findings from a Canadian prospective cohort study (2024, Frontiers in Public Health) —

Despite past COVID-19 infection, approximately one third of PCC cases and infected-controls were seronegative for anti-N IgG.
 
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