Patient characteristics associated with clinically coded long COVID: an OpenSAFELY study using electronic health records

Author:

Wei YinghuiORCID,Horne Elsie MFORCID,Knight RochelleORCID,Cezard GenevieveORCID,Walker Alex,Fisher LouisORCID,Denholm RachelORCID,Taylor KurtORCID,Walker VenexiaORCID,Riley StephanieORCID,Williams Dylan MORCID,Willans RobertORCID,Davy SimonORCID,Bacon SebastianORCID,Goldacre BenORCID,Mehrkar AmirORCID,Denaxas SpirosORCID,Greaves FelixORCID,Silverwood Richard JORCID,Sheikh AzizORCID,Chaturvedi Nish,Wood Angela MORCID,Macleod JohnORCID,Steves ClaireORCID,Sterne Jonathan ACORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTDespite reports of post-COVID-19 syndromes (long COVID) are rising, clinically coded long COVID cases are incomplete in electronic health records. It is unclear how patient characteristics may be associated with clinically coded long COVID. With the approval of NHS England, we undertook a cohort study using electronic health records within the OpenSAFELY-TPP platform in England, to study patient characteristics associated with clinically coded long COVID from 29 January 2020 to 31 March 2022. We estimated age-sex adjusted hazard ratios and fully adjusted hazard ratios for coded long COVID. Patient characteristics included demographic factors, and health behavioural and clinical factors. Among 17,986,419 adults, 36,886 (0.21%) were clinically coded with long COVID. Patient characteristics associated with coded long COVID included female sex, younger age (under 60 years), obesity, living in less deprived areas, ever smoking, greater consultation frequency, and history of diagnosed asthma, mental health conditions, pre-pandemic post-viral fatigue, or psoriasis. The strength of these associations was attenuated following two-dose vaccination compared to before vaccination. The incidence of coded long COVID was higher after hospitalised than non-hospitalised COVID-19. These results should be interpreted with caution given that long COVID was likely under-recorded in electronic health records.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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