COVID hospitalisation leads to loss of brain function - study
12-18 months after hospitalisation due to COVID-19, patients have worse cognitive function than matched control participants
12-18 months after hospitalisation due to COVID-19, patients have worse cognitive function than matched control participants
Scientists now have a better understanding of the immediate and long-term impact of COVID-19 on the brain, thanks to the UK’s largest study to date.
New research shows that 12-18 months after hospitalisation due to COVID-19, patients have worse cognitive function than matched control participants. The findings correlate with reduced brain volume in key areas on MRI scans as well as evidence of abnormally high levels of brain injury proteins in the blood.
Researchers from the University of Birmingham worked with a large research group led by the University of Liverpool and King’s College London and published their findings in Nature Medicine, as part of the COVID-CNS Consortium.
Post-COVID cognitive deficits seen in this study were equivalent to 20 years of normal ageing, but we should remember that these were patients hospitalised with COVID. The results shouldn’t be too widely generalised to all people with lived experience of COVID.
Study authors Professor Matthew Broome and Dr Thomas Jackson, from the University of Birmingham commented: “Post-COVID cognitive deficits seen in this study were equivalent to 20 years of normal ageing, but we should remember that these were patients hospitalised with COVID. The results shouldn’t be too widely generalised to all people with lived experience of COVID.
“However, the scale of deficit in all the cognitive skills tested, and links to brain injury in the brain scans and blood tests, provide the clearest evidence to date that COVID can have significant impacts on brain and mind health long after recovery from respiratory problems.”
The work forms part of the University of Liverpool’s COVID-19 Clinical Neuroscience Study (COVID-CNS), which addresses the critical need to understand the biological causes and long-term outcomes of neurological and neuropsychiatric complications in hospitalised COVID-19 patients.
Study author Dr Greta Wood from the University of Liverpool said: “After hospitalisation with COVID-19 many people report ongoing cognitive symptoms often termed ‘brain fog’. However, it has been unclear as to whether there is objective evidence of cognitive impairment and, if so, is there any biological evidence of brain injury; and most importantly if patients recover over time.
“In this latest research, we studied 351 COVID-19 patients who required hospitalisation with and without new neurological complications. We found that both those with and without acute neurological complications of COVID-19 had worse cognition than would be expected for their age, sex and level of education, based on 3,000 control subjects.”
Corresponding author Professor Benedict Michael, Professor of Neuroscience at the University of Liverpool said: “COVID-19 is not a condition simply of the lung. Often those patients who are most severely affected are the ones who have brain complications.
“These findings indicate that hospitalisation with COVID-19 can lead to global, objectively measurable cognitive deficits that can be identified even 12-18 months after hospitalisation. These persistent cognitive deficits were present in those hospitalised both with and without clinical neurological complications, indicating that COVID-19 alone can cause cognitive impairment without a neurological diagnosis having been made.
“The association with brain cell injury biomarkers in blood and reduced volume of brain regions on MRI indicates that there may be measurable biological mechanisms underpinning this. Now our group is working to understand whether the mechanisms that we have identified in COVID-19 may also be responsible for similar findings in other severe infections, such as influenza.”
Professor Gerome Breen from King’s College London said: “Long term research is now vital to determine how these patients recover or who might worsen and to establish if this in unique to COVID-19 or a common brain injury with other infections. Significantly our work can help guide the development of both similar studies in those with Long-COVID who often have much milder respiratory symptoms and report cognitive symptoms such as ‘brain fog’ and also to develop therapeutic strategies.”
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The University of Birmingham is ranked amongst the world’s top 100 institutions. Its work brings people from across the world to Birmingham, including researchers, teachers and more than 8,000 international students from over 150 countries.
The COVID-19 Clinical Neuroscience Study (COVID-CNS) is a £2.3m UKRI study jointly led by researchers at the University of Liverpool and King’s College London. Acute neurological and neuropsychiatric complications of COVID-19 affect up to 20-30% of hospitalised patients. Researchers are studying the acute neurological and neuropsychiatric effects of infection, the long-term clinical and cognitive outcomes, and crucially determining the underlying biological processes driving this through better understanding of brain injury, immune responses and genetic risk factors.
‘Post-COVID cognitive deficits at one year are global and associated with elevated brain injury markers and grey matter volume reduction: national prospective study of patients seen in hospital’ is published in Nature Medicine (DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41591-024-03309-8).
This publication was funded by the UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) grant COVID-CNS and is supported through the national NIHR BioResource and the NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre. We thank NIHR BioResource team and patient volunteers for their participation and the Patient and Public Involvement Panel who guided each stage.
Professor Matthew Broome is Chair in Psychiatry and Youth Mental Health, and Director of the Institute for Mental Health at the University of Birmingham. He is interested in the onset of mental disorders in young people.
Staff profile for Dr Thomas Jackson, Clinician Scientist in Geriatric Medicine and Visiting Consultant in Geriatric Medicine, Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, College of Medical and Dental Sciences