Neurological and psychiatric risk trajectories after SARS-CoV-2 infection: an analysis of 2-year retrospective cohort studies including 1 284 437 patients
Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust · University of Oxford · +2 more institutions
Abstract
COVID-19 is associated with increased risks of neurological and psychiatric sequelae in the weeks and months thereafter. How long these risks remain, whether they affect children and adults similarly, and whether SARS-CoV-2 variants differ in their risk profiles remains unclear.
In this analysis of 2-year retrospective cohort studies, we extracted data from the TriNetX electronic health records network, an international network of de-identified data from health-care records of approximately 89 million patients collected from hospital, primary care, and specialist providers (mostly from the USA, but also from Australia, the UK, Spain, Bulgaria, India, Malaysia, and Taiwan). A cohort of patients of any age with COVID-19 diagnosed between Jan 20, 2020, and April 13, 2022, was identified and propensity-score matched (1:1) to a contemporaneous cohort of patients with any other respiratory infection. Matching was done on the basis of demographic factors, risk factors for COVID-19 and severe COVID-19 illness, and vaccination status. Analyses were stratified by age group (age
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 82.68
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
7Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Cohort
- Retrospective cohort study
- Propensity score matching
- Hazard ratio
- Cohort study
- Pediatrics
- Internal medicine
- Good health and well-being
Funding
- NINational Institute for Health and Care Excellence
- MTMQ: Transforming Mental Health
- NINational Institute for Health and Care ResearchAward: BRC-1215-20005
- WFWolfson Foundation
- ARAXA Research FundAward: G102329
- MRMedical Research CouncilAwards: G116768, MC_UU_00030/12, SUAG/090 G116768
- NONIHR Oxford Biomedical Research CentreAward: BRC-1215-20005