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Clinical Trial Summary

Older adults and those with chronic underlying health conditions are the most susceptible to COVID-19 and its complications. Although there has been a rapid response to studying the effects of COVID-19 in the acute stages, little is known about recovery over the longer-term. Older adults who survive the diseases are at risk of developing persistent mobility limitations due to extensive bed rest during hospitalization. For older patients and those with underlying frailty recovering from COVID-19, this could rapidly lead to significant physical deconditioning and rapid declines in mobility. Understanding the trajectory of functional recovery of older hospitalised patients with COVID-19 in the short- and long-term is critical to improving patient outcomes and informing health and rehabilitative interventions for survivors.


Clinical Trial Description

The coronavirus disease of 2019 (COVID-19) is an international public health challenge with far-reaching social, economic and health impacts. Older adults and those with chronic underlying health conditions are the most susceptible to COVID-19 and its complications. Of the 15,381 reported cases of COVID-19 in Ontario to date, approximately 22.2% (n=3,420) are aged 60-79 and 22.4% (n=3,443) are 80 and over. Although there has been a rapid and coordinated response to studying the effects of COVID-19 in the acute stages, little is known about recovery over the longer-term. Anecdotally, the investigators are seeing severe declines in function, persistent symptoms, and new and worsening chronic conditions among older survivors of COVID-19. It is known that older adults who survive acute respiratory distress syndrome and associated diseases are at risk of developing persistent mobility limitations due to extensive bed rest and/or long stays in the intensive care unit (ICU) during hospitalization. Recent studies have shown that many older patients spend only 4% of their hospital stay out of bed, and each day in bed is associated with a 1-5% loss in muscle strength. For older patients and those with underlying frailty recovering from COVID-19, this could rapidly lead to significant physical deconditioning and rapid declines in mobility; with further losses in physiological reserve and resilience. Understanding the trajectory of functional recovery of older hospitalised patients with COVID-19 in the short- and long-term is critical to improving patient outcomes and informing health and rehabilitative interventions for survivors. This study is an extension of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) Registry (COREG) platform (PI Andrew Costa)- a unique Kitchener-Waterloo-Hamilton registry of suspected and confirmed COVID-19 hospital admissions based on (and in collaboration with) the WHO International Severe Acute Respiratory and Emerging Infection Consortium (ISARIC). The addition of a prospective cohort study extension to COREG will allow the investigators to follow-older hospitalised COVID-19 patients over the longer-term in order to gain an understanding of the trajectory of functional recovery of the disease. Combining the primary data collection with COREG will also allow the investigators to identify determinants of long-term outcomes for at-risk older adults. These data are necessary to guide the clinical care and optimal management of older patients who survive serious COVID-19 illness. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04602260
Study type Observational
Source McMaster University
Contact
Status Active, not recruiting
Phase
Start date June 9, 2020
Completion date March 31, 2024

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