Skip to main content

Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Pietzner, M; Denaxas, S; Yasmeen, S; Ulmer, MA; Nakanishi, T; Arnold, M; Kastenmüller, G; Hemingway, H; Langenberg, C
Published in: medRxiv
July 1, 2024

Early evidence that patients with (multiple) pre-existing diseases are at highest risk for severe COVID-19 has been instrumental in the pandemic to allocate critical care resources and later vaccination schemes. However, systematic studies exploring the breadth of medical diagnoses, including common, but non-fatal diseases are scarce, but may help to understand severe COVID-19 among patients at supposedly low risk. Here, we systematically harmonized >12 million primary care and hospitalisation health records from ~500,000 UK Biobank participants into 1448 collated disease terms to systematically identify diseases predisposing to severe COVID-19 (requiring hospitalisation or death) and its post-acute sequalae, Long COVID. We identified a total of 679 diseases associated with an increased risk for severe COVID-19 (n=672) and/or Long COVID (n=72) that spanned almost all clinical specialties and were strongly enriched in clusters of cardio-respiratory and endocrine-renal diseases. For 57 diseases, we established consistent evidence to predispose to severe COVID-19 based on survival and genetic susceptibility analyses. This included a possible role of symptoms of malaise and fatigue as a so far largely overlooked risk factor for severe COVID-19. We finally observed partially opposing risk estimates at known risk loci for severe COVID-19 for etiologically related diseases, such as post-inflammatory pulmonary fibrosis (e.g., MUC5B, NPNT, and PSMD3) or rheumatoid arthritis (e.g., TYK2), possibly indicating a segregation of disease mechanisms. Our results provide a unique reference that demonstrates how 1) complex co-occurrence of multiple - including non-fatal - conditions predispose to increased COVID-19 severity and 2) how incorporating the whole breadth of medical diagnosis can guide the interpretation of genetic risk loci.

Duke Scholars

Published In

medRxiv

DOI

Publication Date

July 1, 2024

Location

United States
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Pietzner, M., Denaxas, S., Yasmeen, S., Ulmer, M. A., Nakanishi, T., Arnold, M., … Langenberg, C. (2024). Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID. MedRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.23.23290408
Pietzner, Maik, Spiros Denaxas, Summaira Yasmeen, Maria A. Ulmer, Tomoko Nakanishi, Matthias Arnold, Gabi Kastenmüller, Harry Hemingway, and Claudia Langenberg. “Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID.MedRxiv, July 1, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.05.23.23290408.
Pietzner M, Denaxas S, Yasmeen S, Ulmer MA, Nakanishi T, Arnold M, et al. Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID. medRxiv. 2024 Jul 1;
Pietzner, Maik, et al. “Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID.MedRxiv, July 2024. Pubmed, doi:10.1101/2023.05.23.23290408.
Pietzner M, Denaxas S, Yasmeen S, Ulmer MA, Nakanishi T, Arnold M, Kastenmüller G, Hemingway H, Langenberg C. Complex patterns of multimorbidity associated with severe COVID-19 and Long COVID. medRxiv. 2024 Jul 1;

Published In

medRxiv

DOI

Publication Date

July 1, 2024

Location

United States