Creator(s)

Rachel S. Gross
Tanayott Thaweethai
Amy L. Salisbury
Lawrence C. Kleinman
Sindhu Mohandas
Kyung E. Rhee
Jessica N. Snowden
Kelan G. Tantisira
David Warburton
John C. Wood
Patricia A. Kinser
Joshua D. Milner
Erika B. Rosenzweig
Katherine Irby
Valerie J. Flaherman
Elizabeth W. Karlson
Lori B. Chibnik
Deepti B. Pant
Aparna Krishnamoorthy
Richard Gallagher
Michelle F. Lamendola-Essel
Denise C. Hasson
Stuart D. Katz
Shonna Yin
Benard P. Dreyer
Frank Blancero
Megan Carmilani
K Coombs
Megan L. Fitzgerald
Rebecca J. Letts
Aimee K. Peddie
Judy L. Aschner
Andrew M. Atz
Dithi Banerjee, Children's Mercy HospitalFollow
Amanda Bogie
Hulya Bukulmez
Katharine Clouser
Lesley A. Cottrell
Kelly Cowan
Viren A. D'Sa
Allen Dozor
Amy J. Elliott
E Vincent S. Faustino
Alexander G. Fiks
Sunanda Gaur
Maria L. Gennaro
Stewart Gordon
Uzma N. Hasan
Christina M. Hester
Alexander Hogan
Daniel S. Hsia
David C. Kaelber
Jessica S. Kosut
Sankaran Krishnan
Russell J. McCulloh
Ian C. Michelow
Sheila M. Nolan
Carlos R. Oliveira
Lynn M. Olson
Wilson D. Pace
Paul Palumbo
Hengameh Raissy
Andy Reyes
Judith L. Ross
Juan C. Salazar
Rangaraj Selvarangan, Children's Mercy HospitalFollow
Cheryl R. Stein
Michelle D. Stevenson
Ronald J. Teufel
Alan Werzberger
John M. Westfall
Kathleen Zani
William T. Zempsky
Emily Zimmerman
Marie-Abele C. Bind
James Chan
Zoe Guan
Richard E. Morse
Harrison T. Reeder
Torri D. Metz
Jane W. Newburger
Dongngan T. Truong
Andrea S. Foulkes
Melissa S. Stockwell
RECOVER-Pediatrics Consortium
RECOVER-Pediatrics Group Authors

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

7-2025

Identifier

DOI: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2025.1066; PMCID: PMC12117493

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Recent studies have identified characteristic symptom patterns of long COVID (LC) in adults and children older than 5 years. However, LC remains poorly characterized in early childhood. This knowledge gap limits efforts to identify, care for, and prevent LC in this vulnerable population.

OBJECTIVES: To identify symptoms that had the greatest difference in frequency comparing children with a history of SARS-CoV-2 infection to those without, to identify differences in the types of symptoms by age group (infants/toddlers [0-2 years] vs preschool-aged children [3-5 years]), and to derive an index that can be used in research studies to identify young children with LC.

DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This was a multisite longitudinal cohort study with enrollment from over 30 US health care and community settings, including infants, toddlers, and preschool-aged children with and without SARS-CoV-2 infection history. Study data were analyzed from May to December 2024.

EXPOSURE: SARS-CoV-2 infection.

MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: LC and 41 symptoms among infants/toddlers and 75 symptoms among preschool-aged children.

RESULTS: The study included 472 infants/toddlers (mean [SD] age, 12 [9] months; 278 infected with SARS-CoV-2; 194 uninfected; 234 male [50%]; 73 Black or African American [16%]; 198 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish [43%]; 242 White [52%]) and 539 preschool-aged children (mean [SD] age, 48 [10] months; 399 infected with SARS-CoV-2; 140 uninfected; 277 female [51%]; 70 Black or African American [13%]; 210 Hispanic, Latino, or Spanish [39%]; 287 White [54%]). The median (IQR) time between first infections and completion of symptom surveys was 318 (198-494) days for infants/toddlers and 520 (330-844) days for preschool-aged children. A research index was derived for each age group based on symptoms most associated with infection history. The index is calculated by summing scores assigned to each prolonged symptom that was present, where higher scores indicate greater magnitude of association with history of SARS-CoV-2 infection: poor appetite (5 points), trouble sleeping (3.5 points), wet cough (3.5 points), dry cough (3 points), and stuffy nose (0.5 points) for infants/toddlers, and daytime tiredness/sleepiness/low energy (6.5 points) and dry cough (3 points) for preschool-aged children. Among infants/toddlers with infection, 40 of 278 (14%) were classified as having probable LC by having an index of at least 4 points. Among preschool-aged children, 61 of 399 (15%) were classified as having probable LC by having an index of at least 3 points. Participants with higher indices often had poorer overall health, lower quality of life, and perceived delays in developmental milestones.

CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: This cohort study identified symptom patterns and derived research indices that were distinct between the 2 age groups and differed from those previously identified in older ages, demonstrating the need to characterize LC separately across age ranges.

Journal Title

JAMA Pediatr

Volume

179

Issue

7

First Page

781

Last Page

792

PubMed ID

40554463

Comments

Grants and funding

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the CC-BY License.

Publisher's Link: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamapediatrics/fullarticle/2834480#250466325

Share

COinS