Consistency of inconsistency in long‐COVID‐19 pain symptoms persistency: A systematic review and meta‐analysis

Author:

Kerzhner Oleg1ORCID,Berla Einat2ORCID,Har‐Even Meirav3ORCID,Ratmansky Motti45ORCID,Goor‐Aryeh Itay5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Loewenstein Rehabilitation Medical Center Ra'anana Israel

2. Israel Defense Forces Medical Corps Ramat Gan Israel

3. Department of Anatomy and Anthropology, School of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

4. Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

5. Pain Clinic Sheba Medical Center Ramat Gan Israel

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionIndividuals recovering from acute COVID‐19 episodes may continue to suffer from various ongoing symptoms, collectively referred to as Long‐COVID. Long‐term pain symptoms are amongst the most common and clinically significant symptoms to be reported for this post‐COVID‐19 syndrome.ObjectivesThis systematic review and meta‐analysis aimed to evaluate the proportions of persisting pain symptoms experienced by individuals past the acute phase of COVID‐19 and to identify their associated functional consequences and inflammatory correlates.MethodsTwo online databases were systematically searched from their inception until 31 March 2022. We searched primary research articles in English, which evaluated individuals after laboratory‐confirmed COVID‐19 acute phase resolution and specifically reported on pain symptoms and their inflammatory and/or functional outcomes.ResultsOf the 611 identified articles, 26 were included, used for data extraction, and assessed for their methodological quality and risk of bias by two independent reviewers. Pain symptoms were grouped under one of six major pain domains, serving as our primary co‐outcomes. Proportional meta‐analyses of pooled logit‐transformed values of single proportions were performed using the random‐effects‐restricted maximum‐likelihood model. An estimated 8%, 6%, 18%, 18%, 17%, and 12% of individuals continued to report the persistence of chest, gastrointestinal, musculoskeletal joint, musculoskeletal muscle, general body, and nervous system‐related pain symptoms, respectively, for up to one year after acute phase resolution of COVID‐19. Considerable levels of heterogeneity were demonstrated across all results. Functional and quality‐of‐life impairments and some inflammatory biomarker elevations were associated with the persistence of long‐COVID pain symptoms.ConclusionThis study's findings suggest that although not well characterized, long‐COVID pain symptoms are being experienced by non‐negligible proportions of those recovering from acute COVID‐19 episodes, thus highlighting the importance of future research efforts to focus on this aspect.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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