Impact of inflammatory response in the acute phase of COVID-19 on predicting objective and subjective post-COVID fatigue

Author:

Péron Julie,Nuber-Champier AnthonyORCID,Breville Gautier,Voruz PhilippeORCID,de Alcântara Isabele Jacot,Lalive Patrice,Allali Gilles,Benzakour Lamyae,Braillard Olivia,Nehme Mayssam,Coen Matteo,Serratrice Jacques,Reny Jean-Luc,Pugin Jérôme,Guessous Idris,Landis Basile,Assal Frédéric,Peron Julie

Abstract

Abstract

The biological predictors of objective and subjective fatigue in individuals with post-COVID syndrome remains unclear. This study aims to ascertain the predictive significance of the immune response measured during the acute phase of SARS-CoV-2 infection on various dimensions of fatigue 6–9 months post-infection. We examined the association between immune markers obtained from the serum of 54 patients (mean age: 58.69 ± 10.90; female: 31%) and objective and subjective chronic fatigue using general linear mixed models. Level of IL-1RA, IFNγ and TNFα in plasma and the percentage of monocytes measured in the acute phase of COVID-19 predicted physical and total fatigue. Moreover, the higher the concentration of TNFα (r=-0.40 ; p = .019) in the acute phase, the greater the lack of awareness of cognitive fatigue 6–9 months post-infection. These findings shed light on the relationship between acute inflammatory response and the persistence of both objective and subjective fatigue.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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