Understanding the burden of interstitial lung disease post-COVID-19: the UK Interstitial Lung Disease-Long COVID Study (UKILD-Long COVID)
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Published:2021-09
Issue:1
Volume:8
Page:e001049
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ISSN:2052-4439
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Container-title:BMJ Open Respiratory Research
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language:en
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Short-container-title:BMJ Open Resp Res
Author:
Wild Jim M, Porter Joanna C, Molyneaux Philip L, George Peter M, Stewart IainORCID, Allen Richard James, Aul Raminder, Baillie John KennethORCID, Barratt Shaney L, Beirne Paul, Bianchi Stephen M, Blaikley John F, Brooke Jonathan, Chaudhuri NaziaORCID, Collier Guilhem, Denneny Emma KORCID, Docherty Annemarie, Fabbri LauraORCID, Gibbons Michael A, Gleeson Fergus V, Gooptu Bibek, Hall Ian P, Hanley Neil A, Heightman Melissa, Hillman Toby E, Johnson Simon RORCID, Jones Mark G, Khan FasihulORCID, Lawson Rod, Mehta Puja, Mitchell Jane A, Platé ManuelaORCID, Poinasamy Krisnah, Quint Jennifer K, Rivera-Ortega Pilar, Semple Malcolm, Simpson A John, Smith DJF, Spears Mark, Spencer LIsa G, Stanel Stefan CORCID, Thickett David R, Thompson A A Roger, Walsh Simon LF, Weatherley Nicholas DORCID, Weeks Mark Everard, Wootton Dan G, Brightling Chris EORCID, Chambers Rachel CORCID, Ho Ling-Pei, Jacob Joseph, Piper Hanley Karen, Wain Louise V, Jenkins R GisliORCID
Abstract
IntroductionThe COVID-19 pandemic has led to over 100 million cases worldwide. The UK has had over 4 million cases, 400 000 hospital admissions and 100 000 deaths. Many patients with COVID-19 suffer long-term symptoms, predominantly breathlessness and fatigue whether hospitalised or not. Early data suggest potentially severe long-term consequence of COVID-19 is development of long COVID-19-related interstitial lung disease (LC-ILD).Methods and analysisThe UK Interstitial Lung Disease Consortium (UKILD) will undertake longitudinal observational studies of patients with suspected ILD following COVID-19. The primary objective is to determine ILD prevalence at 12 months following infection and whether clinically severe infection correlates with severity of ILD. Secondary objectives will determine the clinical, genetic, epigenetic and biochemical factors that determine the trajectory of recovery or progression of ILD. Data will be obtained through linkage to the Post-Hospitalisation COVID platform study and community studies. Additional substudies will conduct deep phenotyping. The Xenon MRI investigation of Alveolar dysfunction Substudy will conduct longitudinal xenon alveolar gas transfer and proton perfusion MRI. The POST COVID-19 interstitial lung DiseasE substudy will conduct clinically indicated bronchoalveolar lavage with matched whole blood sampling. Assessments include exploratory single cell RNA and lung microbiomics analysis, gene expression and epigenetic assessment.Ethics and disseminationAll contributing studies have been granted appropriate ethical approvals. Results from this study will be disseminated through peer-reviewed journals.ConclusionThis study will ensure the extent and consequences of LC-ILD are established and enable strategies to mitigate progression of LC-ILD.
Funder
Medical Research Council
Subject
Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine
Cited by
33 articles.
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