Author: Saussez, Sven; Sharma, Shilpee; Thiriard, Anaïs; Olislagers, Véronique; Vu Duc, Inès; Le Bon, Sergeâ€D.; Khalife, Mohamad; Hans, Stephane; De Riu, Giacomo; Hopkins, Claire; Lechien, Jerome R.; Vaira, Luigi A.; Marchant, Arnaud
Title: Predictive factors of smell recovery in a clinical series of 288 coronavirus disease 2019 patients with olfactory dysfunction Cord-id: 73jshcm9 Document date: 2021_7_9
ID: 73jshcm9
Snippet: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The aim was to evaluate potential predictive factors of smell recovery in a clinical series of 288 patients presenting olfactory dysfunction (OD) related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). Potential correlations were sought between epidemiological, clinical and immunological characteristics of patients and the persistence of OD at 60 days. METHODS: COVIDâ€19 positive patients presenting OD were prospectively recruited from three European hospitals. Baseline clinic
Document: BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The aim was to evaluate potential predictive factors of smell recovery in a clinical series of 288 patients presenting olfactory dysfunction (OD) related to coronavirus disease 2019 (COVIDâ€19). Potential correlations were sought between epidemiological, clinical and immunological characteristics of patients and the persistence of OD at 60 days. METHODS: COVIDâ€19 positive patients presenting OD were prospectively recruited from three European hospitals. Baseline clinical and olfactory evaluations were performed within the first 2 weeks after OD onset and repeated at 30 and 60 days. In a subgroup of patients, antiâ€severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARSâ€CoVâ€2) antibodies were measured in serum, saliva and nasal secretions at 60 days. RESULTS: A total of 288 COVIDâ€19 patients with OD were included in the study. Two weeks after the onset of the loss of smell, 52.4% of patients had OD on psychophysical tests, including 113 cases (39.2%) of anosmia and 38 cases (13.2%) of hyposmia. At 60â€day followâ€up, 25.4% of the patients presented persistent OD. There was no significant correlation between sex, age, viral load on nasopharyngeal swab or COVIDâ€19 severity and poor olfactory outcome. In a subgroup of 63 patients, it was demonstrated that patients with poor olfactory outcomes at 60 days had lower levels of salivary and nasal immunoglobulin G (IgG) and IgG1, but similar levels of antibodies in the serum. CONCLUSIONS: No clinical markers predicted the evolution of OD at 60 days. Patients with poor olfactory outcome at 60 days had lower saliva and nasal antibodies, suggesting a role for local immune responses in the persistence of COVIDâ€19 related OD.
Search related documents:
Co phrase search for related documents- Try single phrases listed below for: 1
Co phrase search for related documents, hyperlinks ordered by date