Doctors in India face challenges treating long Covid amid
research gaps
challenges treating long Covid
Doctors in India are grappling to diagnose and treat
unexplained and persistent symptoms of long Covid patients due to limited
guidelines, whereas researchers have flagged inadequate studies on the
condition.
With the World Health Organization declaring an end to Covid
as a global health emergency in May last year, focused efforts are underway
around the world to estimate the burden of long Covid among the population.
The condition refers to the set of lingering symptoms
affecting varied body parts and persisting well beyond the acute Covid
infection period, including cough, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, brain fog
and difficulty in focusing. The viral disease is caused by the SARS-CoV-2
virus.
While studies have suggested that about a third of those
moderately or severely infected are likely to suffer from long Covid,
region-wise though, incidence could vary.
A study by researchers, including those from Harvard Medical
School, US, estimated that 31 per cent of the once-infected people in North
America, 44 per cent in Europe, and 51 per cent in Asia, have long Covid, which
is "challenging the healthcare system, but there are limited guidelines
for its treatment". It was published in the International Journal of
Infectious Diseases in September.
In India, however, studies on long Covid are few and far
between.
One such study by Maulana Azad Medical College in New Delhi,
conducted from May 2022 to March 2023 on 553 patients who had recovered from
Covid, found that about 45 per cent had lingering symptoms, persistent fatigue
and dry cough being the most common.
"There is limited exploratory research on the long
Covid syndrome with scarce data on long-term outcomes," the authors wrote
in the study published in the journal Cureus in May this year.
Understanding the long-term effects of the virus is
important for developing management strategies, optimizing healthcare delivery,
and providing support to recovered Covid patients in the community, they said.
Dr Rajesh Sagar, Professor of Psychiatry, All India
Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), New Delhi, said, "Looking at the
current state of long Covid studies in India, it is too premature to say that
we understand the condition well enough to know how to diagnose or treat
it."
Animesh Samanta, assistant professor at School of Natural
Sciences in Shiv Nadar University, Greater Noida, said, "While studies in
India highlight the growing recognition of neurological complications in long
Covid patients, more focused research on neuroinflammation is needed."
Doctors, too, have reported a rise in patients complaining
of symptoms that they did not have pre-Covid.
"People who never had asthma in the past, post-Covid,
with every viral infection, they get a long cough, shortness of breath and
wheezing, which require the use of inhalers or nebuliser," senior
consultant Dr Neetu Jain, who runs a post-Covid care clinic at Pushpawati
Singhania Hospital and Research Institute, New Delhi, said.
Dr Arun Garg, chairman, Neurology and Neurosciences,
Medanta-The Medicity, Gurugram, said he was noticing a spike in stroke cases
among young patients not suffering from known risk factors such as diabetes,
hypertension and obesity.
"Similarly, we are seeing more cases of encephalopathy
(swelling of the brain) without reason and having a confused state of mind
following one or two days of fever. Their MRI scans show no changes. These
patients have increased significantly after Covid," he said.
In the absence of medical guidelines to diagnose long Covid,
doctors are having to resort to broad, non-specific tests and questionnaires to
gauge a patient's 'quality of life'.
Studies have shown that the fatigue experienced in long
Covid is similar to that in cancer patients, with a quality of life similar to
patients of Parkinson's disease.
"We really do not have any test to diagnose long Covid,
even though it is definitely a clinical diagnosis. We diagnose long Covid for
people who had at least moderate to severe infection, following which they
could never regain the quality-of-life pre-Covid. Checking for inflammatory
markers like C-reactive proteins (CRP) can support the diagnosis," Dr Jain
said.
"Other than routine blood tests that measure
inflammation, we do antibody tests to look for direct markers. In many of these
patients, we are finding rare antibodies which are very new to us and were not
there pre-Covid," Dr Garg said.
Inflammation persisting despite recovery from acute Covid
infection is thought to lie at the heart of long Covid. However, tests to
measure this specific immune response are lacking, even as researchers have
been working in this direction worldwide.
One such effort comes from Shiv Nadar University, where a
team led by Samanta has developed a fluorescent probe capable of detecting
inflammation in brain cells that can arise due to Covid infection.
The probe measures nitric oxide levels in brain cells,
especially in human microglia cells, where increased NO levels are linked to
the SARS-CoV-2 infection. Microglia are immune cells in the brain that fight
disease and help maintain brain health.
Lysosomes within microglia, which help clear foreign
disease-causing agents like the SARS-CoV-2 virus, produce nitric oxide as part
of an immune response to infection. The probe detects nitric oxide produced in
lysosomes in response to infection and thereby allows for a measurement of
inflammation levels.
This examination method can provide "qualitative
information on infection status", said Samanta, corresponding author on
the study published in the journal Analytical Chemistry in American Chemical
Society.
He explained that patients with pre-existing conditions such
as Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease or multiple sclerosis (an
autoimmune disorder) could exhibit prolonged neuroinflammation and loss of
brain cells following Covid infection.
While the probe has shown efficacy in cell cultures, animal
studies would need to be done, before testing it in humans, Samanta said.
Looking at the World Health Organization International
Clinical Trials Registry Platform, the study by Harvard Medical School had
found that 587 clinical studies were conducted on long Covid, of which about 53
per cent (312) were testing potential treatments.
Most of these were found to be conducted in the US (58),
followed by India (55) and Spain (20). The trials looked at interventions
including physical exercise, psychotherapy, and pharmacological ones such as
paxlovid and fluvoxamine.
However, "to date, only 11 of these 312 studies have
published their results that were not confirmative," the researchers
wrote.
The team called for studies to look into sleep disorders
which were rarely included in the registered clinical studies. Further,
interventions targeting the biological processes responsible for long Covid are
needed but currently lacking, they said.
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