News Release

New INSPIRE group data shows “long COVID” not a single condition

Symptom-specific grouping can lead to symptom specific treatments

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Rush University Medical Center

New INSPIRE Data Shows “Long COVID” Not a Single Condition

image: INSPIRE is CDC- funded collaboration of eight major academic medical centers seeking to better understand the long-term effects of COVID view more 

Credit: RUSH Production Group

The latest data from the nationwide INSPIRE study assessing the long-term symptoms and outcomes of the COVID-19 virus in nearly 6000 participants identifies four clinically distinct symptom presentations (phenotypes),adding to the growing body evidence that Long COVID is not singular condition but rather a range of conditions that may evolve, and typically improve, over time.

Lead author Michael Gottlieb, MD, says this better understanding of the clinically distinct manner that patients experience post-COVID -19 complications is an important step towards both patients and clinicians being able to better identify and manage persistent, post-COVID 19 symptoms.

“While it is becoming increasingly clear that Long COVID is not a singular condition, having data showing several distinct, symptom-defined phenotypes is a strong step towards developing evidence-driven approaches to treat the millions of people who continue to experience lingering symptoms,” said Gottlieb, an emergency medicine physician and researcher at RUSH University Medical Center.

INSPIRE is a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) funded collaboration of eight major academic medical centers seeking to better understand the long-term effects of COVID. Nearly 6,000 participants – including a comparative group who visited healthcare facilities with COVID-like symptoms but tested negative for the virus – began self-reporting symptom data via detailed surveys beginning in December 2020 and followed for up to 18 months. Unlike most Long COVID studies that rely predominantly on a retrospective review of information from hospital electronic health records, INSPIRE allows for an ongoing interaction with participants to better document the evolution of symptoms.

This paper, Long COVID Clinical Phenotypes Up to Six Months After Infection Identified by Latent Class Analysis of Self-Reported Symptoms, published in Open Forum Infectious Diseases found that 70 percent of participants had minimal or no symptoms at three and six months follow-up reporting. Most Long COVID studies have focused primarily on the individual symptoms of a few hundred patients without considering of cluster of symptoms. But using a statistical modeling approach called latent class analysis that helps uncover hidden clusters in huge data sets, researchers were able to identify more clearly differentiated symptom presentations among those who reported more persistent, lingering effects of the illness. The four clinically distinct symptom presentation groups (phenotypes) researchers identified are:

  • Minimal/no symptoms
  • Tiredness, headache, and muscle/joint aches without loss of taste/smell
  • Tiredness, headache, and muscle/joint aches WITH loss of taste/smell
  • Multiple miscellaneous symptoms

Researchers noted that significant proportions of participants changed symptom groups over time, reinforcing the dynamic, non-singular nature of prolonged, post-COVID symptoms. The data also suggest that the initial symptoms during the acute illness may be poorly predictive of persistent symptoms. INSPIRE is unique among Long COVID studies by having a control group who were symptomatic with COVID-like illnesses when they tested upon seeking medical care, but were found to be COVID negative. Including this cohort better allows researchers to understand the degree to which similar symptoms may not be unique to the COVID 19 virus.

For example, the COVID positive cohort reporting much higher rates of cognition problems and loss of taste and smell at both 3 and 6 months suggesting these symptoms are more distinctly related that COVID-19 virus. Dr. Gottlieb hopes these results, and the wide set of data coming from the INSPIRE effort, provides both actionable insight and relief to patients, clinicians, and policy makers.

Every day, we hear the growing frustration of those who seek answers and treatment from the persistent symptoms that remain long after the COVID-19 virus has left their bodies. But every day we also gain more precise and data-informed understanding of the symptoms and conditions that have been grouped together as Long COVID.

”Every patient is unique, and these findings can move us towards developing the answers and therapies that address their post-COVID reality.”


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