PURPOSE: Many studies estimate that more than 50% of non-hospitalized patients with long-COVID develop moderate to severe autonomic dysfunction. However, the specific impact of autonomic dysfunction as it relates to quality of life in long-COVID is not fully understood. The aim of the current study is to assess autonomic symptoms and quality-of-life in patients with Post-Acute Sequelae of COVID-19 (PASC) recruited from a neurology department outpatient setting.
METHODOLOGY: In a two-year follow-up study of a baseline cohort of 93 non-hospitalized SARS-CoV-2 laboratory-positive patients evaluated for PASC between November 2020-August 2021, 44 participants completed follow-up telephone questionnaires examining quality-of-life as well as neurologic and autonomic symptoms.
RESULTS: Among 93 participants, 44 (47 %) completed the two-year follow-up evaluation and 27 (61 %) were female with a median age of 55 years (IQR = 24-88). Most participants (95 %, 42/44) were vaccinated against COVID-19 and 43 % (19/44) had a pre-existing neurological disorder. Median time from index COVID-19 infection to follow-up was 26 months (IQR = 23-17), with a median of 15 months (IQR = 15-16) between visits. Fatigue, word finding difficulty, and changes in memory were the most commonly reported PASC symptoms. Sixty-six percent (29/44) of individuals met criteria for autonomic dysfunction as defined by the Composite Autonomic Symptom Score-31 (COMPASS-31) scale. Secretomotor and gastrointestinal subdomains demonstrated significant associations with Neuro-QoL metrics for Anxiety, Depression, and Fatigue. For every 1 additional PASC symptom reported at a follow-up study visit, there was an average increase of 1.5 points on the COMPASS-31 composite score. In addition, visual disturbances and sleep impairment were both associated with increased autonomic dysfunction.
CONCLUSION: The strong association between autonomic dysfunction and reduced QoL in PASC and the relation to insomnia, visual dysfunction, and functional impairment are valuable findings, reinforcing the clinical impact of these symptoms longitudinally after index COVID-19 infection.