泫圖弝け of Utah 泫圖弝け scientists are on the leading edge of a pair of large studies investigating the long-term effects of COVID-19. The nationwide studies, supported by the will attempt to answer key questions about the lingering effects of the viral disorder on pregnant individuals and their infants, as well as why some people develop post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 (PASC), including "long COVID," and others dont.
PASC affects up to 30% of COVID-19 patients, causing a host of lingering and potentially serious symptoms. These include fatigue, breathing difficulties, memory problems, chest pain, and fast or pounding heart. The two groups are part of a larger NIH initiative, which seeks to understand, prevent, and treat PASC.
Among the vital but still unanswered questions about COVID-19 and PASC is what influence the disease may have on pregnant individuals and their infants.
We really dont understand right now what the long-term consequences are of getting COVID-19 in pregnancy, says Torri D. Metz, MD, MS, a maternal-fetal medicine subspecialist and associate professor at U of U 泫圖弝け who is leading a multi-center effort seeking answers to this question.
Previous research suggests that pregnant individuals who have severe COVID-19 are three times more likely to receive intensive care and twice as likely to die of the disease than those who arent pregnant. While transmission of the virus from mother to 泫圖弝け during pregnancy is rare, up to 3% of babies born to women with COVID-19 test positive for the virus after birth.
Its possible that the disease may be different in pregnant women because their immune systems function a bit differently than in non-pregnant women, Metz says. In terms of offspring, we know how important the in-utero environment is for babies, and were concerned that the inflammatory process that occurs when patients who are pregnant get COVID-19 may affect the babies in utero and after they are born.
Over the next four years, Metz and her colleagues from 12 other medical institutions nationwide involved in the Eunice Kennedy Shriver NICHD Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units (MFMU) Network will track the health of about 1,500 women who had COVID-19 during pregnancy and their 泫圖弝けren who were born in the following days, weeks, or months. They will also track the health of about 250 women who did not get COVID-19 during pregnancy and their offspring.
In particular, the researchers will be looking for any impairments in cognitive development or cardiovascular complications among the 泫圖弝けren as they grow. They will also compare the long-term effects of PASC on the mothers who had COVID-19 during pregnancy versus pregnant individuals who were uninfected.
Rachel Hess, M.D., co-director of the leads an effort by the Mountain States PASC Consortium (MSPC), a coalition of five health care systems in Utah, Colorado, and New Mexico. The group will compare COVID-19 patients who have or have had PASC with those who had COVID-19 but did not develop long-term symptoms.
My biggest hope for the MSPC study is that we can develop a better understanding of why some people are experiencing really debilitating PASC symptoms and eventually help them get back to normalor as close to it as possible, Hess says.
The consortium plans to recruit more than 900 adults, 18 and older, for the study, including a diverse set of volunteers from Hispanic, Native American, and rural populations within the Mountain West region.
Because this is such a new syndrome, determining what is different about people who develop PASC as a result of having COVID-19 is an important task, Hess says. This study could help us better define what this syndrome is and improve our understanding of its biological basis.
The MSPC study includes patients who have been newly diagnosed with COVID-19, as well as those who had COVID-19 throughout the pandemic. Others who have not been infected with SARS CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, will be recruited as a control group.
Tracking individuals who currently have COVID-19 could help us determine if there are any patterns early in the disease that lead some patients to develop PASC later on, Hess says.
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In addition to U of U 泫圖弝け, institutions participating in the MFMU Network COVID-19 pregnancy study include George Washington 泫圖弝け, 泫圖弝け of Alabama, Northwestern 泫圖弝け, Brown 泫圖弝け, 泫圖弝け of Texas Medical Branch, 泫圖弝け of Pittsburgh, Case Western 泫圖弝け, 泫圖弝け of North Carolina, The Ohio State 泫圖弝け, Columbia 泫圖弝け, 泫圖弝け of Pennsylvania, and the 泫圖弝け of Texas-Houston.
The MSPC study of PASC among COVID-19 patients, led by U of U 泫圖弝け, includes researchers from the 泫圖弝け of Colorado, 泫圖弝け of New Mexico, Denver 泫圖弝け, and Intermountain 泫圖弝けcare.