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. 2023 Apr;18(3):801-809.
doi: 10.1007/s11739-023-03228-5. Epub 2023 Mar 21.

Post-COVID condition: dispensation of drugs and diagnostic tests as proxies of healthcare impact

Affiliations

Post-COVID condition: dispensation of drugs and diagnostic tests as proxies of healthcare impact

Alessandro Nobili et al. Intern Emerg Med. 2023 Apr.

Abstract

With the goal to increase knowledge on the healthcare impact of the post-COVID-19 condition we exploited the administrative claims database of Lombardy, the largest Italian region and the first after China to be heavily hit by the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic in February-May 2020. We chose to employ the dispensation of drugs and diagnostic tests as proxies of the impact of the post-COVID condition in 46,574 cases who recovered from COVID-19 and were negative at PCR testing within June 20, 2020. Data were obtained throughout the 18-month post-negativization period until December 2021 and results on the use of drugs and diagnostic tests were compared with those accrued in the same cases during the pre-COVID period in July-December 2019. After an increase in the first semester after SARS-CoV-2 negativization (July-December 2020), trends in the dispensation of drugs according to the broad ATC classes and of diagnostic tests decreased or remained substantially stable. However, dispensation of drugs for acid related disorders (A02), diabetes (A10), heparins (B01AB), direct oral anticoagulants (B01AP), antipsychotics (N05A), antidepressants (N06A) and for obstructive airways diseases (R03) was still higher than in the pre-COVID period. These findings, based upon drug and diagnostic test dispensation as proxies of the healthcare impact of the post-COVID condition, show that in a substantial proportion of recovered cases the post-COVID condition is active and clinically relevant 18 months after the acute disease. The findings also provide indirect evidence of the body organs and systems more compromised in the post-COVID period.

Keywords: Administrative database; Anticoagulants; Antipsychotic drugs; COPD; Clinical sequels; Diabetes; Long-COVID; Polypharmacy.

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Conflict of interest statement

None of the authors declares to have conflict of interest.

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