Functional recovery following hospitalisation of patients diagnosed with COVID-19: a protocol for a longitudinal cohort study

Author:

Reid Julie C,Costa Andrew PORCID,Duong MyLinh,Ho Terence,Kruisselbrink Rebecca,Raina Parminder,Kirkwood Renata,Jones AaronORCID,Corriveau Sophie,Griffith Lauren EORCID,Haider Shariq,Marcucci Maura,Markle-Reid Maureen,Morrison Hope,Raghavan Natya,Schumacher Connie,Vrkljan Brenda,Junek Mats,Martin Leslie,Patel Ameen,Girolametto Carla,Pitre TylerORCID,Beauchamp Marla KORCID

Abstract

Introduction COVID-19 is an international public health crisis with more than 132 million infections worldwide. Beyond acute infection, emerging data indicate patients diagnosed with COVID-19 may experience persistent sequelae similar to survivors of sepsis or acute respiratory syndromes, including mobility limitations and fatigue. However, there is limited evidence on the trajectory of functional recovery in those hospitalised with COVID-19. The primary aim of the Coronavirus Registry Functional Recovery (COREG-FR) study is to understand the trajectory of functional recovery among individuals hospitalised for COVID-19 over the medium (up to 6 months) and longer term (6–12 months) that will guide clinical care and optimal management of serious COVID-19 illness and recovery. Methods and analysis COREG-FR is a multicentre longitudinal cohort study. We will enrol a minimum of 211 adults age 18 years and older with COVID-19 from five hospitals. Participants will be followed from admission to hospital as an inpatient, to hospital discharge, and at 3-month, 6-month, 9-month and up to 12-month post-hospital discharge. We will conduct telephone interviews at ward admission and discharge, and telephone interviews plus in-person assessments of physical function and lung function at all remaining follow-ups. Our primary outcome is the Activity Measure for Post-Acute Care mobility scale measured at all time points. We will conduct linear mixed effects regression analyses to explore determinants of functional outcomes after COVID-19 illness. Subgroup analyses based on age (≤65 vs >65 years), frailty status (Clinical Frailty Scale score ≤4 vs >5) and variants of concern will be conducted. Ethics and dissemination COREG-FR has been approved by Research Ethics Boards at participating sites. We will disseminate this work through peer-reviewed manuscripts, presentations at national and international meetings and through the established COREG website (www.coregontario.ca). COREG-FR is designed as a data platform for future studies evaluating COVID-19 recovery. Trial registration number NCT04602260; Pre-results.

Funder

Institute of Aging

Hamilton Academic Health Sciences Organization

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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4. Long-term Cognitive Impairment and Functional Disability Among Survivors of Severe Sepsis

5. Enhancing Recovery From Sepsis

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