Andrea Lovato1, Giacomo Rossettini2, Cosimo de Filippis1. 1. Audiology Unit, Department of Neurosciences, Treviso Hospital, University of Padova, Treviso, Italy. 2. Department of Neuroscience, Rehabilitation, Ophthalmology, Genetics, Maternal and Child Health, University of Genoa, Savona, Italy.
To the Editor,We read with interest the recent meta‐analysis by Sun et al
that included 50 466 patients with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID‐19). The author found that fever and cough were the most common symptoms, and several subjects had muscle soreness or fatigue. In addition, they reported that “by reading the included literature, we found that diarrhea, hemoptysis, headache, sore throat, shock, and other symptoms are rare.”Regarding sore throat, we believed that this could be a confounding affirmation. The majority of included patients (48 981 subjects) in the review
was extracted from studies that did not describe accurately the clinical presentation.
,
,
The largest report on 44 672 confirmed COVID‐19 patients focused on critical cases and on the case‐fatality rate, without a detailed presentation of the symptoms.
Yang et al
showed limited data and we were able to download only a two pages manuscript. Sun et al
described only age and sex on included patients. On the contrary, other studies that described the full symptoms spectrum of COVID‐19 found that pharyngodynia was not rare. The sore throat was reported to be present in 5% to 17.4% of COVID‐19 patients.
,
,
Guan et al
in a large series of 1099 COVID‐19 patients found pharyngodynia in 13.9% of cases.At this stage of the COVID‐19 pandemic, it is fundamental to inform correctly health care providers. Real‐time reverse transcriptase‐polymerase chain reaction (RT‐PCR) assays were the standard for the detection of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS‐CoV‐2) from respiratory secretions collected by nasal and oropharyngeal swabs.
A high false‐negative rate (FNR) has been reported for these tests. Results from quantitative RT‐PCR could be affected by the variation of viral RNA sequences or by the viral load in different anatomic sites during the disease natural history.
By estimate, FNR from one‐time testing was high as 30% to 50% in real COVID‐19 cases.
A recent report on 1014 COVID‐19 cases found that only 59% of patients had positive SARS‐CoV‐2 swabs at presentation, while chest computed tomography had higher sensitivity for the diagnosis of COVID‐19.
Consequently, the clinical presentation could be helpful in identifying suspected COVID‐19 cases and we think that sore throat should not be considered a rare symptom as reported by Sun et al.
This could lead to undiagnosed cases and to the spread of infection. Patients with the suspected disease should be isolated (use of individual rooms was recommended, with negative pressure if possible), and health personnel should use waterproof gowns, gloves, goggles, and surgical masks or FFP2 masks.
Further studies are needed to clarify the importance of pharyngodynia in COVID‐19.
CONFLICT OF INTERESTS
The authors declare that there are no conflict of interests.
Authors: Filippo Maselli; Leonardo Piano; Simone Cecchetto; Lorenzo Storari; Giacomo Rossettini; Firas Mourad Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-01-04 Impact factor: 3.390
Authors: Eduardo Martin-Sanz; Juan Riestra; Laura Yebra; Alba Larran; Fiorella Mancino; Joaquin Yanes-Diaz; Maria Garrote; Marta Colmenero; Esther Montiel; Cristina Molina; Daniel Moreno; Antonio Rodriguez; Gerardo Monedero; Ricardo Sanz-Fernández; Rocio Gonzalez; Jonathan Esteban-Sanchez Journal: Laryngoscope Date: 2020-08-17 Impact factor: 2.970