People who have had COVID-19 are at increased risk for developing gastrointestinal disorders within a year after infection compared with people who have not been infected, according to an analysis of federal health data by researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis and the VA St. Louis Health Care System (Nature Commun 2023;14:983).
Such conditions include liver problems, acute pancreatitis, irritable bowel syndrome, acid reflux and ulcers in the lining of the stomach or upper intestine. The post–COVID-19 GI tract also is associated with an increased likelihood of constipation, diarrhea, abdominal pain, bloating and vomiting.
“Gastrointestinal problems were among the first that were reported by the patient community,” said senior author Ziyad Al-Aly, MD, a clinical epidemiologist at Washington University.
“At this point in our research, the findings on the GI tract and long COVID did not surprise us,” Dr. Al-Aly said. “The virus can be destructive, even among those considered healthy or who have had mild infections. We’re seeing COVID-19’s ability to attack any organ system in the body, sometimes with serious long-term consequences, including death.”
The researchers estimated that, so far, infections caused by SARS-CoV-2 have contributed to more than 6 million new cases of GI disorders in the United States and 42 million new cases worldwide.
“This is no small number,” said Dr. Al-Aly, who treats patients within the VA St. Louis Health Care System and is its chief of research and development service. “It is crucial to include GI health as an integral part of post-acute COVID care.”
For the study, researchers analyzed about 14 million de-identified medical records in a database maintained by the Department of Veterans Affairs, the nation’s largest integrated healthcare system.
They created a controlled data set of 154,068 people who had tested positive for COVID-19 sometime from March 1, 2020, through Jan. 15, 2021, and who had survived the first 30 days after infection. Statistical modeling was used to compare GI outcomes in the COVID-19 data set with two other groups of people not infected with the virus: a control group of more than 5.6 million people who did not have COVID-19 during the same time frame; and a control group of more than 5.8 million people from March 1, 2018, to Dec. 31, 2019, well before the virus had infected and killed millions globally.
Overall, GI disorders were 36% more likely in people with COVID-19 compared with those who had not been infected with the virus. This includes people who were and were not hospitalized because of the virus.
“A lot of people draw comparisons between COVID-19 and the flu,” Dr. Al-Aly said. “We compared health outcomes in those hospitalized with the flu versus those hospitalized with COVID, and we still saw an increased risk of GI disorders among people hospitalized with COVID-19. Even this far into the pandemic, COVID-19 remains more serious than the flu.”
People in the study were mostly older white men; however, the researchers also analyzed data that included more than 1.1 million women and adults of all ages and races. “Those who acquired long-term GI problems after infection included people of all ages, sexes and racial backgrounds,” Dr. Al-Aly said.
Additionally, few people in the study had been vaccinated for COVID-19 because the vaccines were not yet widely available during the time span of the study, from March 2020 through early January 2021. The data also predate the delta, omicron and other COVID-19 variants, and newer data indicate the COVID-19 vaccines provide at least some protection against long COVID.
Compared with patients in the control groups, people who had had COVID-19 were at a 62% increased risk for developing ulcers in the lining of the stomach or small intestine; a 35% heightened risk for suffering from acid reflux disease; and a 46% increased risk for experiencing acute pancreatitis.
Compared with control groups, patients who had had the virus were 54% more likely to suffer from irritable bowel syndrome, 47% more likely to experience inflammation of the stomach lining and 36% more likely to have an upset stomach without an obvious cause.
Similarly, those who had had COVID-19 were 54% more likely to experience digestive symptoms such as constipation, diarrhea, bloating, vomiting and abdominal pain.
“Taken with all the evidence that has accumulated thus far,” Dr. Al-Aly said, “the findings in this report call for the urgent need to double down and accelerate our effort to develop strategies to prevent and treat the long-term health effects after COVID-19 infection.”
—GEN Staff
Originally published by our sister publication Infectious Disease Special Edition
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