| Literature DB >> 33857435 |
Woo-Jung Song1, Christopher K M Hui2, James H Hull3, Surinder S Birring4, Lorcan McGarvey5, Stuart B Mazzone6, Kian Fan Chung7.
Abstract
Cough is one of the most common presenting symptoms of COVID-19, along with fever and loss of taste and smell. Cough can persist for weeks or months after SARS-CoV-2 infection, often accompanied by chronic fatigue, cognitive impairment, dyspnoea, or pain-a collection of long-term effects referred to as the post-COVID syndrome or long COVID. We hypothesise that the pathways of neurotropism, neuroinflammation, and neuroimmunomodulation through the vagal sensory nerves, which are implicated in SARS-CoV-2 infection, lead to a cough hypersensitivity state. The post-COVID syndrome might also result from neuroinflammatory events in the brain. We highlight gaps in understanding of the mechanisms of acute and chronic COVID-19-associated cough and post-COVID syndrome, consider potential ways to reduce the effect of COVID-19 by controlling cough, and suggest future directions for research and clinical practice. Although neuromodulators such as gabapentin or opioids might be considered for acute and chronic COVID-19 cough, we discuss the possible mechanisms of COVID-19-associated cough and the promise of new anti-inflammatories or neuromodulators that might successfully target both the cough of COVID-19 and the post-COVID syndrome.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33857435 PMCID: PMC8041436 DOI: 10.1016/S2213-2600(21)00125-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lancet Respir Med ISSN: 2213-2600 Impact factor: 102.642
Figure 1Follow-up studies reporting persistent cough in patients with post-COVID syndrome
Studies sorted by follow-up duration in ascending order from left to right. Follow-up duration ranges from 6 weeks to 6 months. Data were retrieved from available publications, including peer-reviewed papers and preprints.9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26 Detailed characteristics of each study are summarised in table 1. Some studies did not report acute cough data.
Studies reporting cough at follow-up in patients with COVID-19
| Cheng et al, 2021 | Retrospective, multicentre cohort study; London, UK | 113 patients discharged from the respiratory unit after COVID-19; median age 65 years | 6 weeks after discharge | Not reported | 19 of 113 (17%) | Fatigue (67%), breathlessness (38%) |
| Moradian et al, 2020 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Tehran, Iran | 200 patients (160 [80%] men, 40 [20%] women) discharged from hospital after moderate-to-severe COVID-19; mean age 55·6 years | 6 weeks after discharge | 88 of 200 (44·0%) | 23 of 200 (11·5%) | Fatigue (19·5%), dyspnoea (18·5%), weakness (18·0%), anxiety (15·0%), activity intolerance (14·5%) |
| Halpin et al, 2021 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Leeds, UK | 100 patients (56 [56%] men, 44 [44%] women) discharged from hospital after COVID-19; mean age 66·6 years | Mean 48 (SD 10·3) days after discharge | Not reported | 21 of 100 (21%) overall; eight of 32 (25%) ICU patients and eight of 68 (12%) ward patients | Fatigue (64%), breathlessness (50%) |
| Mandal et al, 2020 | Prospective, multicentre follow-up study; London, UK | 384 patients (238 [62%] men, 146 [38%] women) hospitalised with COVID-19; mean age 59·9 years | Median 54 (IQR 47–59) days after discharge | Not reported | 131 of 384 (34%) persistent cough (numerical rating scale ≥1); 38 of 384 (10%), burdensome cough (numerical rating scale ≥4) | Fatigue (69·0%), breathlessness (53·1%), depression (14·6%) |
| D'Cruz et al, 2021 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; London, UK | 119 patients (74 [62%] men, 45 [38%] women) hospitalised with severe COVID-19 pneumonia; mean age 58·7 years | Median 61 (IQR 51–67) days after discharge | Not reported | 49 of 115 (42·6%) persistent cough (numerical rating scale ≥1); eight of 115 (7·0%) burdensome cough (numerical rating scale ≥4) | Fatigue (67·8%), sleep disturbance (56·5%), pain (49·6%) |
| Chopra et al, 2020 | Prospective, multicentre follow-up survey; MI, USA | 488 survivors of COVID-19 hospitalisation (253 [51·8%] men, 235 [48·2%] women); mean age 62 years | 60 days after discharge | Not reported | 75 of 488 (15·4%) new or worsened cough | Emotional impact (48·8%), breathlessness walking up stairs (23·0%), shortness of breath or chest tightness or wheezing (16·6%), loss of taste or smell (13·1%) |
| Carfi et al, 2020 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Rome, Italy | 143 patients (90 [63%] men, 53 [37%] women) discharged from hospital after COVID-19; mean age 56·5 years | Mean 60·3 (SD 13·6) days after symptom onset | 99 of 143 (69%) | 23 of 143 (16%) | Fatigue (53·1%), dyspnoea (43·4%), joint pain (27·3%), chest pain (21·7%) |
| Arnold et al, 2021 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Bristol, UK | 110 patients (62 [56%] men, 28 [44%] women) hospitalised with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection; median age 60 years | Median 90 (IQR 80–97) days after symptom onset | 74 of 110 (67%) | 13 of 110 (11·8%) | Excessive fatigue (39%), breathlessness (39%), insomnia (24%) |
| Sonnweber et al, 2020 | Prospective, multicentre follow-up study; Austria | 145 patients (83 [57%] men, 62 [43%] women) who required hospitalisation (75%) or outpatient care with persisting symptoms; mean age 57 years | Mean 100 (SD 21) days after symptom onset | 102 of 145 (70%) | 25 of 145 (17%) | Dyspnoea (36%), sleep disorder (28%), night sweat (24%), pain (24%), hyposmia or anosmia (19%) |
| Xiong et al, 2021 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Wuhan, China | 538 patients (245 [45·5%] men, 293 [54·5%] women) discharged from hospital after COVID-19; median age 52 years | At least 3 months after discharge | 297 of 538 (55·2%) | 38 of 538 (7·1%) | Alopecia (28·6%), fatigue (28·3%), sweating (23·6%), somniopathy (17·7%), chest distress (14·1%) |
| Zhao et al, 2020 | Retrospective, multicentre follow-up study; Zhengzhou, China | 55 patients (32 [58·2%] men, 23 [41·8%] women) discharged from hospital (51 patients had pneumonia); median age 47·7 years | 3 months after discharge | 30 of 55 (54·5%) | 1 of 55 (1·8%) | Gastrointestinal symptoms (30·9%), headache (18·2%), fatigue (16·4%), exertional dyspnoea (14·6%) |
| Valiente-De Santis et al, 2020 (pre-print) | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Malaga, Spain | 108 patients (48 [44·4%] men, 60 [55·6%] women) discharged from admission or emergency service care; mean age 55·5 years | 12 weeks after acute phase | Not reported | 28 of 108 (25·9%) | Dyspnoea (55·6%), asthenia (44·9%), chest pain (25·9%), palpitation (22·2%) |
| Wong et al, 2020 | Prospective, multicentre follow-up study; Vancouver, Canada | 78 patients (50 [64%] men, 28 [36%] women) hospitalised with laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection; mean age 62 years | Median 13 (IQR 11–14) weeks after symptom onset | Not reported | 18 of 78 (23%) | Dyspnoea (50%) |
| Garrigues et al, 2020 | Prospective, single-centre follow-up study; Paris, France | 120 patients (75 [62·5%] men, 45 [37·5%] women) discharged from hospital after COVID-19; mean age 63·2 years | Mean 110·9 days after admission | 87 of 120 (72·5%) overall; 69 of 96 (71·9%) ward patients and 18 of 24 (75·0%) ICU patients | 20 of 120 (16·7%) overall; 14 of 96 (14·6%) ward patients and six of 24 (25·0%) ICU patients | Fatigue (55·0%), dyspnoea (42·0%), loss of memory (34·0%), sleep disorder (30·8%), concentration disorder (28·0%) |
| Stavem et al, 2020 | Prospective geographical cohort study; Norway (areas covering 17% of the population) | 451 non-hospitalised patients (198 [44%] men, 253 [56%] women) with positive PCR; mean age 49·8 years | Median 117 (range 41–193) days after symptom onset | 302 of 451 (67%) dry cough; 12 of 451 (28%) productive cough | 27 of 451 (6%) dry cough; 18 of 451 (4%) productive cough | Dyspnoea (16%), loss of smell (12%), loss of taste (10%), arthralgia (9%), myalgia (8%) |
| Petersen et al, 2020 | Prospective geographical cohort study; Faroe Islands | 180 non-hospitalised patients (83 [46%] men, 97 [54%] women) with positive PCR; mean age 39·9 years | Mean 125 days after symptom onset | 73 of 180 (40·5%) dry cough; 46 of 180 (25·5%) productive cough | Nine of 180 (5%) dry cough; 11 of 180 (6%) productive cough | Fatigue (29%), loss of smell (24%), loss of taste (15%), arthralgia (10%), rhinorrhoea (9%) |
| Guler et al, 2021 | Prospective, multicentre follow-up study; Switzerland | 113 patients (67 [59·3%] men, 46 [40·7%] women) who survived acute COVID-19 (66 patients had severe or critical disease; 47 had mild or moderate disease); mean age 57 years | Median 128 (IQR 108–144) days after symptom onset | Not reported | Not reported; cough VAS median 0 (IQR 0–2) | .. |
| Klein et al, 2021 | Prospective follow-up study of PCR-positive patients with COVID-19 recruited via social media and word of mouth; Israel | 112 patients (72 [64·3%] men, 40 [35·7%] women; six hospitalised and 106 ambulatory patients) in recovery after COVID-19; mean age 35 years | 6 weeks and 6 months after symptom onset | 68 of 112 (61%) | 29 of 112 (26%) at 6 weeks; one of 112 (1%) at 6 months | At 6 months: fatigue (23%), smell change (15%), breathing difficulty (10%), taste change (8%), memory disorder (6%) |
| Assaf et al, 2020 | Patient-led survey through the Body Politic COVID-19 Support Group on Slack (75·4% of participants) or through social media sites such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram; 71·7% from the USA and UK, 12·7% from the USA and UK | 640 patients (150 [23·4%] men, 490 [76·6%] women) who had previously experienced or were currently experiencing symptoms consistent with COVID-19 and had suspected or confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection (23·1% tested positive, 27·5% tested negative, 47·8% not tested); 62·7% between the ages of 30 and 49 years | Up to 8 weeks after symptom onset | At week 1: 301 of 640 (47·0%) dry cough; 141 of 640 (22·0%) persistent uncontrollable cough | At week 8: 179 of 640 (28·0%) dry cough; 57 of 640 (8·9%) persistent uncontrollable cough | Mild shortness of breath (39%), mild chest tightness (34%), mild fatigue (33%), moderate fatigue (32%) |
| Sudre et al, 2020 (preprint) | Prospective cohort study of users of the COVID Symptom Study app | 4182 patients (1192 [28·5%] men, 2990 [71·5%] women) who had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2 by PCR swab testing and logged as “feeling physically normal” before the start of illness (up to 14 days before testing); mean age 42·8 years | 56 days after symptom onset | Not reported | 920 of 4182 (22%) persistent cough, defined as symptoms lasting more than 56 days | .. |
| Goërtz et al, 2020 | Online survey of individuals with persistent complaints related to COVID-19; the Netherlands and Belgium | 2133 members of Facebook groups for COVID-19 patients with persistent complaints and a panel of people who registered at a website of the Lung Foundation Netherlands (309 [14·5%] men, 1824 [85·3%] women); mean age 47 years | Mean 79 (SD 17) days after symptom onset | 1450 of 2133 (68·0%) | 619 of 2133 (29·0%) | Fatigue (94·9%), dyspnoea (89·5%), headache (76·0%), chest tightness (75·2%), muscle pain (64·7%) |
Studies are listed by follow-up duration from 6 weeks to 6 months. ICU=intensive care unit. VAS=visual analogue scale.
Figure 2Prevalence of post-COVID cough in 14 studies of patients who required hospitalisation
Follow-up duration ranges from 6 weeks to 4 months. Detailed characteristics of included studies are summarised in table 1.9, 10, 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23 We conducted a random-effects meta-analysis to estimate the pooled prevalence and standard errors for post-COVID-cough in previously hospitalised patients, and quantified the degree of heterogeneity between studies using the I in the MetaXL 5.3 software (EpiGear International Pty, Sunrise Beach, QLD, Australia).
Figure 3Proposed mechanisms of cough in SARS-CoV-2 infection
SARS-CoV-2 might induce cough via neuroinflammatory and neuroimmune mechanisms. (Left) Direct infection or viral recognition by vagal sensory neurons or sensory neuron-associated glial cells could promote a neuroinflammatory state, characterised by neuronal or glial release of neuroactive inflammatory mediators. Neuroinflammation could occur at the level of the nerve terminal in the airways and lungs, within the vagus nerve containing the neuronal axons, at the level of the vagal sensory ganglia containing neuronal cell bodies, or at sites within the CNS responsible for integrating vagal sensory inputs. Neuroinflammatory mediators include neuronally released interferons and glial-derived ATP, which are important for antiviral responses within the nervous system. (Right) Traditional inflammatory cells, including dendritic cells, macrophages, neutrophils, and epithelial cells, involved in SARS-CoV-2 infection and viral recognition can also release a broad range of inflammatory mediators, including antiviral interferons, cytokines, prostanoids, lipid mediators, and ATP. Many of these mediators can activate or sensitise vagal sensory nerves via cognate receptors or gating ion channels, providing a neuroimmune axis for alterations in vagal sensory neuron activity. Sensory neuron activation could enhance inflammation via the release of neuropeptides, which facilitate inflammatory cell recruitment and activation in a process known as neurogenic inflammation. Collectively, these cascades could upregulate sensory neuron activation and input to brain circuits mediating cough. ACE2=angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (or other viral entry factors). IFNAR=interferon receptor. P2X2/3=purinergic receptors. TLRs=toll-like receptors. TNFR=tumour necrosis factor receptor. TRPs=transient receptor potential channels.
Future research in COVID-19-associated cough
| Some sensory neurons (eg, those arising from the dorsal root ganglia) express entry factors for SARS-CoV-2, providing a route for neuronal infection; bronchopulmonary (vagal) sensory neuron terminals are in close apposition to airway epithelia and are probably exposed to SARS-CoV-2; bronchopulmonary (vagal) sensory neurons express innate viral recognition receptors and receptors for many cytokines | How does SARS-CoV-2 infection modify the activity of vagal sensory neurons mediating cough? What are the pathological consequences, within peripheral and central cough processing pathways, of SARS-CoV-2 infection? What is the inflammatory (neural and airway) profile of individuals with COVID-19-related cough? What is the impact of modulating neuroinflammation and neuroimmune processes on cough in COVID-19? | Investigations of SARS-CoV-2 interaction with vagal bronchopulmonary sensory nerves, including neural expression of ACE2 and other entry factors, involvement of neural innate viral recognition factors, and role of resident and recruited airway and lung cells (and their mediators) in sensory neuronal activation. Assessment of bronchopulmonary sensory neuron sensitivity in COVID-19, including use of animal models to evaluate cough response pathways and pathological changes following SARS-CoV-2 infection and treatment Mechanistic studies in humans to assess peripheral and central processing to cough challenge with functional MRI, particularly with respect to post-COVID syndrome Airway sampling to study inflammatory phenotype or effect of SARS-CoV-2 infection on airway nerve architecture or deformity |
| Cough is a key symptom of acute infection and an important mode of SARS-CoV-2 transmission | What are the characteristics of acute COVID-19-related cough? Can these characteristics aid diagnosis or prognosis? How does acute COVID-19-related cough respond to anti-inflammatory drugs (eg, corticosteroids) or SARS-CoV-2-targeted treatments? How does the presence of comorbid conditions or diagnoses influence the presence of COVID-19-related cough? Is antitussive therapy during the acute phase of COVID-19 safe and effective in treating morbidity or reducing SARS-CoV-2 transmission? | Subjective and objective cough evaluation, with sound recording, and studies of relationship with health outcomes, with appropriate prospective comparator groups Assessment of utility of cough sound analysis based on artificial intelligence algorithm to facilitate early detection of COVID-19 Initial evaluation and re-evaluation of data from randomised clinical trials with cough documentation; future establishment of robust cough measures to monitor cough outcome and clinical responses Randomised controlled trials of existing or emerging antitussive therapies with robust primary outcome measures in patients with COVID-19 and cough Inclusion of validated cough endpoint measures in future viral inoculation models for optimisation of vaccine development |
| Cough persists in a subgroup of patients after resolution of acute disease; cough in post-COVID syndrome is usually associated with chronic fatigue and dyspnoea | What are the prevalence, longitudinal course, clinical features, and effect on quality of life of post-COVID cough? Are they similar to those encountered in cough hypersensitivity syndrome? Do treatments for cough hypersensitivity help in post-COVID cough management? Are novel treatments (eg, P2X3 antagonists) beneficial? Does cough modulation treatment (eg, speech pathology therapy) help? Should the treatment to post-COVID syndrome be a global approach to tackling all symptoms? | Cross-sectional evaluation of prevalence of cough in those with co-existing pulmonary infiltrates, documented reflux, or history of airways disease, or in those taking ACE inhibitors; evaluation of changes with treatment response Longitudinal follow-up and robust phenotyping with cough hypersensitivity testing (eg, cough challenge testing) and validated measures of cough (eg, cough-related quality of life); evaluation of sequelae and impact on quality of life (eg, incontinence and social exclusion) Randomised controlled trials of novel cough therapies in patients with post-COVID cough using robust cough outcome measures (eg, ambulatory cough count); response of concomitant symptoms of post-COVID syndrome |
ACE=angiotensin-converting enzyme. ACE2=angiotensin-converting enzyme 2. P2X3= P2X purinoceptor 3.