作者
Giovanni Marasco,Cesare Cremon,Maria Raffaella Barbaro,Giulia Cacciari,Francesca Falangone,A Kagramanova,Д.С. Бордин,Vasile Drug,Egidia Miftode,Pietro Fusaroli,Salem Youssef Mohamed,Chiara Ricci,Massimo Bellini,M. Masudur Rahman,Luigi Melcarne,Javier Santos,Beatriz Lobo,Serhat Bor,Suna Yapalı,Deniz Akyol,Ferdane Sapmaz,Yonca YILMAZ ÜRÜN,Tuğçe Eşkazan,Altay Çelebi,Hüseyin KAÇMAZ,Berat Ebik,Hatice Cilem Binicier,Mehmet Sait Bugdayci,Munkhtsetseg Banzragch Yağcı,Hüsnü Pullukçu,Berrin Yalınbaş Kaya,Ali Türeyen,İbrahim Hatemı,Elif Sitre Koç,Göktuğ Şirin,Ali Rıza Çalışkan,Göksel Bengı,Esra Ergün Alış,Snežana Lukić,Мери Трајковска,Keren Hod,Dan L. Dumitraşcu,Antonello Pietrangelo,Elena Corradini,Magnus Simrén,Jessica Sjölund,Navkiran Thind Tornkvist,Uday C. Ghoshal,Olga Kolokolnikova,Antonio Colecchia,Jordi Serra,Giovanni Maconi,Roberto De Giorgio,Silvio Danese,Piero Portincasa,Antonio Di Sabatino,Marcello Maggio,Elena Philippou,Yeong Yeh Lee,Daniele Salvi,Alessandro Venturi,Claudio Borghi,Marco Zoli,Paolo Gionchetti,Pierluigi Viale,Vincenzo Stanghellini,Giovanni Barbara
摘要
Objectives The long-term consequences of COVID-19 infection on the gastrointestinal tract remain unclear. Here, we aimed to evaluate the prevalence of gastrointestinal symptoms and post-COVID-19 disorders of gut–brain interaction after hospitalisation for SARS-CoV-2 infection. Design GI-COVID-19 is a prospective, multicentre, controlled study. Patients with and without COVID-19 diagnosis were evaluated on hospital admission and after 1, 6 and 12 months post hospitalisation. Gastrointestinal symptoms, anxiety and depression were assessed using validated questionnaires. Results The study included 2183 hospitalised patients. The primary analysis included a total of 883 patients (614 patients with COVID-19 and 269 controls) due to the exclusion of patients with pre-existing gastrointestinal symptoms and/or surgery. At enrolment, gastrointestinal symptoms were more frequent among patients with COVID-19 than in the control group (59.3% vs 39.7%, p<0.001). At the 12-month follow-up, constipation and hard stools were significantly more prevalent in controls than in patients with COVID-19 (16% vs 9.6%, p=0.019 and 17.7% vs 10.9%, p=0.011, respectively). Compared with controls, patients with COVID-19 reported higher rates of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) according to Rome IV criteria: 0.5% versus 3.2%, p=0.045. Factors significantly associated with IBS diagnosis included history of allergies, chronic intake of proton pump inhibitors and presence of dyspnoea. At the 6-month follow-up, the rate of patients with COVID-19 fulfilling the criteria for depression was higher than among controls. Conclusion Compared with controls, hospitalised patients with COVID-19 had fewer problems of constipation and hard stools at 12 months after acute infection. Patients with COVID-19 had significantly higher rates of IBS than controls. Trial registration number NCT04691895 .