Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome

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Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome Michael G. Risbano MD, MA Co-Director UPMC Post-Covid Recovery Clinic Director, Invasive Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing Program Head, Clinical Operations and Translational Research Pulmonary Hypertension Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

Transcript of Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome

Page 1: Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome

Post-Acute COVID-19 SyndromeMichael G. Risbano MD, MA

Co-Director UPMC Post-Covid Recovery Clinic

Director, Invasive Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing Program

Head, Clinical Operations and Translational Research Pulmonary Hypertension

Pulmonary, Allergy, and Critical Care Medicine

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

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Overview

• Define Post-Acute Sequelae of COVID-19

• Epidemiology and Symptoms

• Pathophysiology

• Phenotyping

• Evaluation and Management

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A name is a name is a name

• Long Covid

• Long Tail Covid

• Long Haul Covid-19

• Post-Covid Syndrome

• Post-Acute Sequelae of Covid-19 (PASC)

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Post-Acute Sequelae of Covid-19 (PASC)

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• No objective tests or biomarkers

• It is not the blood clots, myocarditis, multisystem inflammatory disease or pneumonia (disease states caused by COVID-19 infection)

• CDC, long Covid is “a range of symptoms that can last weeks or months…[that] can happen to anyone who has had Covid-19.”

• Symptoms may affect multiple organ systems, occur in diverse patterns, wax and wane and worsen after physical or mental activity.

Phillips et al. NEJM (2021) PMID: 34192429

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Timeline of Post-Acute COVID-19

Nalbandian. Nature Medicine (2021) PMID: 33753937

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Epidemiology and Symptoms

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Post-Acute COVID-19 Study

Post-acute COVID-19 US study

• 60 days post-hospital discharge

• Gender and age not recorded

• n=488

• 6.7% deceased, 15.1% readmission

• 32.6% persistent symptoms

• 18.9% new or worsening symptoms

• DOE stairs 22.9%, cough 15.4%, loss taste/smell 13.1%

Post-acute COVID-19 Italian study

• n=142 hospitalized patients

• Follow-up 60 days from onset of first symptom

• Persistent symptoms 87.4%• Fatigue 53.1%• Dyspnea 43.4%• Joint pain 27.3%• Chest pain 21.7%• 55% had 3 or more of these symptoms

• 44.1% had a decline in QoL

Carfi. JAMA (2020) PMID: 32644129Chopra. AIM (2020) PMID: 33175566

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UK Coronavirus Infection Survey

Post infection survey

• n=26,147 (+)PCR

• April 26, 2020 to August 1, 2021

• Questions• Month 1 weekly questions

• Months 2-12 monthly

• 1:1 match age, gender, pre-existing conditions

Symptoms in the past seven days:

1. Fever

2. Headache

3. Muscle ache

4. Weakness

5. Tiredness

6. Nausea

7. Abdominal pain

8. Diarrhoea

9. Sore throat

10. Cough

11. Shortness of breath

12. Loss of taste / loss of smell

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/articles/technicalarticleupdatedestimatesoftheprevalenceofpostacutesymptomsamongpeoplewithcoronaviruscovid19intheuk/26april2020to1august2021 Accessed 9/15/2021

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Percentage of study participants reporting any of 12 symptoms continuously

Group At least 5 weeks post infection At least 12 weeks post infection

Covid-19 Controls Covid-19 Control

All People 11.4 (7.3-17.7) 2.2 (0.9-5.3) 3.0 (1.9-4.6) 0.5 (0.2-1.1)

Males 9.8 (5.8-16.7) 2.0 (0.8-5.0) 2.6 (1.5-4.6) 0.4 (0.2-0.9)

Females 13.1 (8.1-21.3) 2.4 (1.0-5.8) 3.4 (2.2-5.5) 0.4 (0.2-0.7)

* 95% confidence intervals

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/healthandsocialcare/conditionsanddiseases/articles/technicalarticleupdatedestimatesoftheprevalenceofpostacutesymptomsamongpeoplewithcoronaviruscovid19intheuk/26april2020to1august2021 Accessed 9/15/2021

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COVID-19 Infections

• United States 120 million

• Pennsylvania 1.36 million

• Allegheny County 86,280

CDC COVID Data Tracker accessed 9/16/2021

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COVID-19 Infections

• United States 120 million x 10 - 30% = 12 - 36 million

• Pennsylvania 1.36 million x 10 - 30% = 136 - 408K

• Allegheny County 86,280 x 10 - 30% = 8.6 - 26K

CDC COVID Data Tracker accessed 9/16/2021

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COVID-19 Infections

• United States 120 million x 3% = 3.6 million

• Pennsylvania 1.36 million x 3% = 40.8K

• Allegheny County 86,280 x 3% = 2.6K

CDC COVID Data Tracker accessed 9/16/2021

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• Average age PASC 40 years• Affect health care systems

• Affect economic recovery

• Physiologic vs. psychogenic• Disbelieved, marginalized or

shunned by medical community

• May further exacerbate gender and racial inequality

• 3 months after CAP (n=576)1

• 51% fatigue

• 28% dyspnea

• SARS-CoV Hong Kong (n=233)2

• 40% chronic fatigue 40 months post-infection

• MERS-CoV symptoms up to 18 months post-infection3

Gaffney. Am J Med (2021) PMID: 34428463Phillips et al. NEJM (2021) PMID: 34192429

1. Metlay et al. JGIM (1997) PMID: 92292812. Lam et al. AIM (2009). PMID: 200087003. Lee et al. Psych Invest (2019) PMID: 30605995

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Pathophysiology PASC

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Pathophysiology Acute COVID-19 → PASC

Gupta. Nature Medicine (2021) PMID: 32651579

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Ramakrishnan. Frontiers in Immunology (2021) PMID: 34276671

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Phenotyping PASC

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Physiology Studies on Post-Covid Patients

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Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (CPET)

• Noninvasive measure of resting and exercise measurements of metabolic rates to identify organ systems limiting exercise capacity.

• +/- arterial line

• Symptoms with exercise, study exercise!

• Identify limitations due to: • Cardiac

• Pulmonary Vascular

• Ventilatory limitation

• Deconditioning / poor effort

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AuthorPMID#

Baratto33764166

Rinaldo33926969

Skjørten34210791

Motiejunaite33536937

ReferenceValues

Location Milan, Italy Milan, Italy Oslo, Norway Paris, France

Days post PCR (+) Hospital discharge 97 (26) 90 90

Covid Disease SeverityPost Hospital

Oxygen 22.2%Non-Invasive Vent 50%Mechanical Vent 27.8%

Critical 52%Severe 24%

Mild-Moderate 24%

ICU 20%Non-ICU 80%

Mechanical Vent 13%

ICU 22%Severe 49%

Intubated 18%

n 18 41 156 114

Age (years) 66 (21) 56 (13) 56.2 (12.7) 57 (48-66)

Gender (female) 28% 35% 39% 33%

Residual lung disease (CT Scan) -- 63% -- 65 (57%)

Reduced VO2 peak (n, %) 17 (95%) 41 (54.6%) 49 (31%) 85 (75%)

⩒O2 peak (%Predicted) 59 (32) 72% (9) 84% (19) 71% (60-85) >80 - 85%

DLco (%Predicted) -- 69 (13) 84 (16) 79 (65-90) >80%

Ventilatory Limitation n=2 No No No

Diagnosis AnemiaReduced systemic O2

extraction and delivery

Deconditioning Deconditioning Deconditioning

Mean (SD) Median (IQR)Mean (SD)Mean (SD)

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Impact of the severity of the acute phase of COVID-19 on long-term sequalae not clear

• Mild: symptomatic + no PNA

• Mod: PNA + SpO2 >90% on RA

• Severe: PNA + SpO2 <90% on RA

• Critical: ARDS + P/F <300 mmHg on NIV or mechanical ventilation

• Severity of disease does not affect oxygen consumption.

All(n=75)

Mild-Moderate

(n=18)

Severe(n=18)

Critical (n=39)

p-value

Age (years) 57 (12) 50 (9)* 58 (13) 59 (11)* 0.042

Female (n,%) 32 (43) 9 (50) 11 (61) 12 (31) 0.076

CT(abnormal/ total, %)

43/68(63%)

5/16*(31%)

9/18(50%)

29/38 *(76%)

0.006

DLco (%) 71 (14) 72 (13) 67 (12) 73 (15) 0.378

Reduced VO2

peak (n, %)41 (54) 11 (61) 9 (50) 21 (51) 0.79

⩒O2 peak (%Predicted)

83 (15) 83 (17) 82 (16) 84 (15) 0.895

⩒E/⩒CO2 slope 28.4 (3.1) 27.1 (2.6)* 29.8 (3.9)* 28.3 (2.6) 0.028

Ventilatory Limitation

No No No No

Rinaldo. Respiratory Medicine (2021) PMID: 34416618

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Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (CPET)

• Caveat to the CPET studies:• premorbid/ baseline values are unclear

• What does a normal ⩒O2 peak in a symptomatic patient mean?

• ⩒O2 peak ∆ 104→84%

• What is the physiology of PASC >3 months after initial infection?

• Is there advanced testing beyond CPET?

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iCPET

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Invasive Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (iCPET)

RHC

Radial

Arterial Line

Exercise

Bike

CPET

• Breath-by-breath analysis of ventilatory gas exchange and cardiac function in association with upright cycle ergometer exercise testing.

• Invasive access• Arterial line

• Pressures• Blood gas

• Right heart catheterization• Hemodynamics• Blood gas

• Resting Hemodynamics

• Peak Exercise Hemodynamics and Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing

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Invasive Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (iCPET)

• Clinical

• Research• Blood samples: rest, peak and post

exercise

• Diagnoses• Cardiac (ePH 2°↑ LVEDP)• Pulmonary Vascular (PAH, ePH)• Preload insufficiency• Decreased peripheral O2 extraction• Ventilatory limitation• Deconditioning / poor effort

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Post-COVID-19 (n=10) Controls (n=10) p-value

Age, years 48 ± 15 48 ± 8 0.87

Female [n(%)] 9 (90) 8 (80) 0.53

Interval infection to iCPET (months) 11 ± 1 --

Inpatient stay 1 (10%) --

⩒O2 peak (%Predicted) 70 ± 11 131 ± 45 0.001

Cardiac Output (% Predicted) 115 ± 44 123 ± 34 0.64

Ventilatory Limitation No No

Rest and peak hemodynamic limitation No No

CaO2 (mL/dL) 18.6 ± 1.3 19.5 ± 2.3 0.29

Hemoglobin (g/dL) 13.4 ± 1.1 14.2 ± 1.4 0.16

SER = C(a-v)O2 /CaO2 0.49 ± 0.1 0.78 ± 0.1 <0.0001

Singh et al. Chest 2021 (PMID 34389297)

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Radial Art Line CaO2 Normal20 dL/mL

PA CatheterCvO2 elevated8.5 dL/mL

Systemic Extraction Ratio (%) = C(a-v)O2 /CaO2 x 100= (20-8.5) / 20 x 100 = 57.5%normal >80%

Who Cares?

Fick ⩒O2 = CO x C(a-v)O2

Mechanisms

1) Primary dysfunction of the skeletal muscle mitochondrion

2) Hyperventilation and a left shift of the oxyhemoglobin dissociation curve

3) Limb muscle microcirculatory dysregulation

Reduced Peripheral Oxygen Extraction

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Physiologic mechanisms of post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2

infection

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Referred to UPMC Post-Covid Clinic Program for persistent symptoms

21 Referred to ACPET Program for exercise intolerance

Excluded1 RER <1.05

1 refused study

12 Reduced VO2 Max6 Normal VO2 Max

1 without peak hemodynamics

2 ePH3 Decreased peripheral oxygen extraction

1 Preload Insufficiency and decreased peripheral Oxygen Extraction

5 Preload Insufficiency

1 incomplete CPET data*

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Table 1. Demographics All COVID-19 Post-COVID-19 Normal VO2 Peak

Post-COVID-19 Reduced VO2 Peak p-value

n 17 5 12

Age (years) 43 (39-58) 45 (36-42) 43 (38-60) ns

Female (%) 70.6% 80% 66.6% nsRace (%)

White 100 100 100 nsBlack 0 0 0Asian 0 0 0Hispanic 0 0 0

Height (cm) 172.7 (166.5-184.0) 178 (169.1-191.5) 170 (166-183) nsWeight (kg) 100 (86.5-117.1) 110.2 (91.2-123.7) 98 (85.5-115.5) nsBMI (kg/m2) 33.9 (30.2-39.1) 31.9 (26.4-42.1) 34.3 (30.6-39.9) nsHemoglobin 13.8 (13.0-15.1) 13.8 (13.7-14.7) 13.5 (12.9-15.1) nsDuration of PASC Symptoms (Days) 152.5 (127-324) 145 (82.5-256.5) 170.0 (127-367) ns

Hypertension 8 2 6Hyperlipidemia 3 0 3Obstructive Sleep Apnea 3 0 3Anxiety 4 1 3Beta Blocker 7 1 6Calcium Channel Blocker 4 0 4Diuretics 4 1 3

*Unpublished data

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Preload Insufficiency Defined

• VO2 max <80%

• Normal left ventricular ejection fraction

• RAPmax <6.5 mmHg

• COmax <80%

Preload Insufficiency

• Dysautonomia

• Adrenal insufficiency

• Volume depletion

• Medications

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Table 2. Peak Exercise Values

All COVID-19 Post-COVID-19 Normal VO2 Peak

Post-COVID-19 Reduced VO2 Peak p-value

n 17 5 12Exercise Values

RER 1.15 (1.1-1.2) 1.15 (1.1-1.2) 1.15 (1.1-1.2) 0.791METS 4.3 (3.3-5.4) 5.9 (5.4-6.8) 3.8 (3.3-4.8) 0.040Watts 111.0 (92.0-148.0) 162 (160-94) 101 (92-119) 0.040

CPET Values⩒O2 Peak (%) 71.6 (65.5-84.0) 100 (84.2-101.9) 66.6 (59.8-73.6) 0.002⩒E/⩒CO2 Slope 31.3 (29.5-35.4) 31.3 (31.1-33.2) 32.2 (27.9-37.5) 0.960⩒E (L/min) 62.4 (51.8-67.1) 90.6 (89.6-96.9) 55.5 (47-64.2) 0.015

Peak Invasive HemodynamicsHR (BPM) 142.5 (131-158) 149 (131-161) 140 (134-145) 0.500RAP (mmHg) 3.0 (2-6) 2.0 (0-6) 3.5 (2-6.5) 0.340CO (L/min) 13.4 (10.8-15.3) 16.0 (14.5-18.9) 12.6 (10.2-13.6) 0.006Peak CO (% Predicted) 82.6 (68.8-106.4) 110.5 (109.6-114.1) 72.0 (60.1-93.6) 0.008Stroke Volume (mL) 92.7 (88.4-106.4) 108.6 (96.0-113.5) 90.6 (87.0-101.2) 0.126DO2 (L/min) 2.73

(2.11-3.11)3.26

(2.95-2.61)2.37

(1.84-2.74)0.008

Blood Gas Values

CaO2 (mL/dL) 19.7 (18.2-20.9) 20.4 (20.3-20.4) 18.9 (17.7-21.5) 0.342

SER = C(a-v)O2 /CaO2 0.64 (0.57-0.68) 0.68 (0.67-0.71) 0.62 (0.57-0.65) 0.250

*Unpublished data Median (IQR)

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Evaluation and Management of PASC

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• Studies unrevealing

• Symptoms are disproportionate to resting studies

Advertisement Referrals

Filter Referrals

• Positive COVID-19 test • Symptoms > 2 months post diagnosis

Pulmonary COVID-19 Clinic Evaluation (Telemedor in person)

• Neurocognitive evaluation• Exercise capacity / exercise limitation• Physical Exam

Standard workup

• Full PFTs • Resting TTE • 6MWT

• NT-proBNP• CRP, TSH, ANA

• D-Dimer if (+) or concerning symptoms/history →CTA• If RV abnormal or known acute PE or iCPET c/w chronic

PE →VQ scan

• HRCT scan with inspiratory and expiratory images• ECG

• Invasive Cardiopulmonary Exercise Testing (iCPET)

• Persistent Fevers → ID

• Cardiology to order ischemia work-up

• Cardiac MR testing

• Neurocognitive testing

• Psychiatry• Social Work

(+) DOE >2 months

• Refer to pulmonary rehab• Physical Therapy

• Dysautonomia Testing

• Cardiac MR• VQ Scan

• Research

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Treatment

• There are no specific therapies.

• Supportive care • Treat underlying conditions

• Cognitive evaluation and therapy

• Smell therapy

• Increase fluid / volume intake / beta blockers

• Physical therapy / cardiopulmonary rehab

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UPMC Centers for Rehab Services

• Fatigue // Generalized Weakness // Decreased Exercise Capacity

• Difficulty Walking // Difficulty with Stairs // Difficulty with Mobility

• Dyspnea with Activity // POTS

• Neuropathy // Balance Problems

• Headaches // Dizziness

• Generalized Pain (Myalgias, Arthralgias)

Outpatient Physical Therapy

Helpful if any cardiac/pulmonary workup is completed pre-rehab if

concerns identified.

Therapists will closely monitor HR, BP and SaO2 in response to

activity/exercise

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RxWell is a coaching-enhanced digital cognitive behavioral therapy tool

• Behavioral health challenges are pervasive and under-treated in the general population.

• RxWell is a digital tool that utilizes evidence-basedCognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) to help patients better manage anxiety and depression.

• UPMC coaches communicate with patients within RxWell by secure texting to motivate and educate patients and help them personalize techniques to achieve their specific goals.

TECHNIQUES COACH INTERACTIONS

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Conclusions

• PASC is a heterogenous condition.

• PASC pathophysiology is likely to be multifactorial

• Signals of deconditioning, preload insufficiency, exercise PH and reduced peripheral oxygen extraction have been identified.

• Severity of initial COVID-19 infection is not associated with differences in exercise capacity.

• Recovery time is variable, but it occurs.

• Best to take a multidisciplinary approach to the management of PASC.

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Thank You!

UPMC Post-Covid Recovery Clinic

• Alison Morris, MD

• Danny Dunlap, MD

• Corrine Kliment, MD

• Carl Koch, MD

• Karla Yoney, PA-C

• Emily Joseph

ACPET Program

• Robert Rathbun, EP-C

• David Barber, EP-C

• Karen Barron, RN

• Yasmin Al Aaraj, MD

• Shadyside Cath Lab