First results from largescale long-COVID study
Glasgow Caledonian University Reader and Public Health Scotland Consultant Healthcare Scientist Dr Andrew McAuley played a key role in the first largescale study into long-COVID in Scotland.
One of the largest studies to date into the long-term effects of COVID-19 – the Long-CISS (Covid In Scotland Study) – found that 1 in 20 people who took part in the research had not recovered from having COVID-19 at their most recent follow up – between six and 18 months following infection with SARS-CoV-2.
The CISS study – which was led by the University of Glasgow in collaboration with Public Health Scotland, the NHS in Scotland, and the Universities of Aberdeen and Edinburgh, and funded by the Scottish Government Chief Scientist Office – was set up in May 2021 to understand the long-term impact of COVID 19, and compare it with the health and wellbeing of people who had not yet been infected.
The first set of results from the ongoing study, published in Nature Communications, found that, overall, 42% of people infected with COVID-19 reported feeling only partially recovered between six and 18 months following infection. Details of each person’s partial recovery were not given in the survey but could include a range of symptoms from mild to moderate, and may not necessarily result in a long COVID diagnosis.
Dr McAuley is a member of the Sexual Health and Blood Borne Viruses, and Substance Use research groups at the University’s School of Health and Life Sciences’ Research Centre for Health (ReaCH).
ReaCH makes a direct and significant contribution to Sustainable Development Goal 3 – good health and wellbeing – issued by the United Nations in 2015 as a blueprint for peace and prosperity across the planet.
Dr McAuley said: “This study provides novel and important evidence on long-COVID in Scotland. We know that being fully vaccinated against COVID-19 can reduce the likelihood of developing long-COVID and therefore we encourage those who are eligible for the COVID vaccine to take the opportunity to enhance their protection by getting vaccinated.”
Reassuringly, the study found that those with asymptomatic infection had no long-term impact and people who had been vaccinated prior to infection with COVID-19 appeared to have protection from some long-term symptoms.
However, the study found that the impact for people with long-COVID were wide-reaching, with a wide-range of symptoms, impacts on all aspects of daily life and reduced overall quality of life.
Overall, the study found that long-COVID symptoms were more likely following severe infections requiring hospitalisation. The most reported long-COVID symptoms included breathlessness, chest pain, palpitations, and confusion, or ‘brain fog’.
Long-COVID was also more likely in individuals who were older, female and those from deprived communities. In addition, those with pre-existing physical and mental health problems, such as respiratory disease and depression, were also more likely to experience long-COVID.
The study found that whilst recovery status remained constant over the follow-up period for most participants, 13% of people reported improvement over time and 11% reported some deterioration.
The CISS study used a Scottish population cohort of 33,281 laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infections, matched with 62,957 never-infected individuals from the general population, with both groups followed-up via six, 12 and 18-month questionnaires, with researchers able to link to hospitalisation and death records.
Using NHS health data records, all Scottish adults who had a positive COVID-19 test, as well a sample of people who tested negative for the disease, were sent an SMS message inviting them to take part in the CISS study. Individuals were then asked to answer questions online about their health, both before and after COVID-19, to determine whether the virus has had any lasting effects on their lives.
The study Outcomes among confirmed cases and a matched comparison group in the Long-COVID in Scotland Study is published in Nature Communications.