A75-04 Covid-19 and Changes in Lung Health in a General Population-based Cohort: The Mesa Lung Study
P Balte, Y Sun, J Kim, N Allen, R P Bowler, E A Regan, E A Hoffman, D A Lynch, G T O’Connor, W Post, B M Smith, P Woodruff, V E Ortega, R G Barr, E OelsnerAbstract
Rationale
Impaired lung health may serve as a risk factor for, and a post-acute sequela of, SARS-CoV-2 infection. Yet most prior studies of lung health sequelae of COVID-19 lacked information on pre-infection lung health, a major antecedent confounder. To identify associations of COVID-19 with changes in lung health, we leveraged paired pre- and post-pandemic data on respiratory symptoms, lung function, and lung structure in a general population-based cohort.
Methods
We studied participants in the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Lung Study with paired pre-pandemic (2016-2018) and post-pandemic (2022-2024) assessments of respiratory symptoms, spirometry, and lung CT. SARS-CoV-2 infection (2020-2023) was ascertained using a composite of questionnaires, serology, and medical record adjudication, and classified as severe (requiring hospitalization) or non-severe (not requiring hospitalization). Lung health was assessed by questionnaire (mMRC grade ≥2 dyspnea, chronic cough, chronic phlegm, chronic bronchitis), pre-bronchodilator spirometry (FEV1, FVC, FEV1:FVC), and lung density on non-contrast lung CT (% low attenuation areas, % high attenuation areas). Each post-pandemic lung health measure was regressed on infection history and the corresponding pre-pandemic lung health measure, adjusting for age at post-pandemic exam, sex, race/ethnicity, smoking status, and vaccination status at infection. Sensitivity analyses were included- (a) restriction to participants without pre-pandemic respiratory symptoms and (b) with additional adjustment for time since infection and variant wave.
Results
Among 2,015 participants (mean age 77.2±7.5 years; 55% female; 40% non-Hispanic White; 25% Black; 11% Asian; 23% Hispanic/Latino), 59 (3%) experienced severe and 506 (25%) non-severe SARS-CoV-2 infection. The prevalence of respiratory symptoms was similar or slightly higher at the post- vs. pre-pandemic exam (grade ≥2 dyspnea: 14% vs. 10%; chronic cough: 10% vs. 8%; chronic phlegm: 9% vs. 8%; chronic bronchitis: 4% vs. 4%; p-values <0.0001). Compared with participants without infection, those with severe infection had higher odds of chronic cough (OR:2.9, 95%CI:1.3-6.3) and chronic bronchitis (OR:3.3, 95%CI:1.2-9.0) at the post-pandemic exam (Table). Associations were stronger among individuals infected >90 days prior to the post-pandemic assessment and during pre-Omicron waves. Results were similar when restricted to participants without pre-pandemic symptoms. No significant associations were observed for non-severe infection (vs. no infection) or for any other lung health outcomes.
Conclusions
Controlling for pre-pandemic lung health, severe COVID-19 was associated with increased odds of chronic cough and chronic bronchitis but not with changes in lung function or structure in a general population-based sample. Non-severe COVID-19 was not associated with lung health outcomes.
This abstract is funded by: OT2HL156812, R21HL165405, R01HL077612, 75N92025D00022, 75N92025D00026, 75N92020D00002, 75N92025D00024, 75N92025D00027, 75N92025D00025, 75N92025D00028