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Recovery from Covid-19 smell loss: Two-years of follow up

To report long-term patterns of recovery and non-recovery in a large nationwide cohort of subjects with COVID-19 associated smell loss. Prospectively, longitudinal questionnaires. Web-based national survey. A longitudinal survey of adults with COVID-19 and/or sudden change in smell or taste since Ja...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:American journal of otolaryngology 2022-09, Vol.43 (5), p.103607-103607, Article 103607
Main Authors: McWilliams, Michael P., Coelho, Daniel H., Reiter, Evan R., Costanzo, Richard M.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:To report long-term patterns of recovery and non-recovery in a large nationwide cohort of subjects with COVID-19 associated smell loss. Prospectively, longitudinal questionnaires. Web-based national survey. A longitudinal survey of adults with COVID-19 and/or sudden change in smell or taste since January 1, 2020 was launched April 10, 2020. Participants were queried again in late May 2022 regarding recovery. Data from respondents with >2 years since loss were analyzed and compared to recovery status of those more recently effected. 1103 responded to the survey of whom 946 met inclusion criteria. Among the 267 respondents for whom at least 2 years of follow up was available, 38.2 % reported full recovery, 54.3 % partial, and 7.5 % no recovery. For the entire cohort (all with ≥3 months since smell loss), 38.7 % reported complete recovery, 51.0 % reported partial recovery (ranging from mild complaints to severe phantosmia or dysosmia), and 10.3 % reported no improvement at all. Complete recovery of smell function was significantly higher in those under 40 years old (45.6 % compared to 32.9 % in those over 40). Although the vast majority of subjects who do recover do so within the first 3 months, long-term spontaneous recovery can occur. Rates of recovery do not seem to differ depending on when during the pandemic the loss first occurred.
ISSN:0196-0709
1532-818X
DOI:10.1016/j.amjoto.2022.103607