Major depressive episodes (MDE) following COVID-19 have been described in approximately 30 % of cases. A clinical picture characterized by physical and cognitive symptoms with underlying immune-inflammatory changes has been reported. However, a comparison of post-COVID-19 MDE with non-post-COVID-19 depression is still lacking. This study aims to characterize 209 patients with MDE, post-COVID-19 vs. non-post-COVID-19, focusing on physical and cognitive symptomatology evaluated through Hamilton Depression (HDRS) and Anxiety Rating Scales (HARS), Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST), Perceived Deficits Questionnaire-Depression 5-items (PDQ-D5). Inflammatory levels were assessed with blood count-derived indexes. Post-COVID-19 group (46.9 % of patients) displayed higher rates of first-onset depressive episodes (p = 0.001), an older age at onset (p = 0.006), more physical and cognitive features according to subitems of HDRS (p = 0.001), HARS (p < 0.001), and PDQ-D5 scores (p = 0.019), as well as higher inflammatory indexes (p < 0.001). Logistic regression showed a significant association of post-COVID-19 MDE with physical symptomatology (p = 0.02) and Systemic Immune-Inflammatory Index (p = 0.04). Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves displayed a discriminative potential for this association (AUC = 0.921). These results highlight the specific clinical presentation of post-COVID-19 MDE, with prominent physical symptoms and increased inflammation levels, suggesting that a more careful characterization might inform personalized interventions and promote full functional recovery in these patients.
Pepe, M., Di Nicola, M., Mandracchia, G., Margoni, S., Monacelli, L., Restaino, A., Koukopoulos, A. E., Sani, G., Physical symptoms and inflammatory levels characterize post-COVID-19 depressive episodes compared to non-post-COVID-19 depression, <<JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS>>, 2025; 383 (N/A): 410-416. [doi:10.1016/j.jad.2025.05.018] [https://hdl.handle.net/10807/324900]
Physical symptoms and inflammatory levels characterize post-COVID-19 depressive episodes compared to non-post-COVID-19 depression
Pepe, MariaCo-primo
;Di Nicola, Marco
Co-primo
;Mandracchia, Giuseppe;Margoni, Stella;Monacelli, Leonardo;Restaino, Antonio;Sani, GabrieleUltimo
2025
Abstract
Major depressive episodes (MDE) following COVID-19 have been described in approximately 30 % of cases. A clinical picture characterized by physical and cognitive symptoms with underlying immune-inflammatory changes has been reported. However, a comparison of post-COVID-19 MDE with non-post-COVID-19 depression is still lacking. This study aims to characterize 209 patients with MDE, post-COVID-19 vs. non-post-COVID-19, focusing on physical and cognitive symptomatology evaluated through Hamilton Depression (HDRS) and Anxiety Rating Scales (HARS), Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST), Perceived Deficits Questionnaire-Depression 5-items (PDQ-D5). Inflammatory levels were assessed with blood count-derived indexes. Post-COVID-19 group (46.9 % of patients) displayed higher rates of first-onset depressive episodes (p = 0.001), an older age at onset (p = 0.006), more physical and cognitive features according to subitems of HDRS (p = 0.001), HARS (p < 0.001), and PDQ-D5 scores (p = 0.019), as well as higher inflammatory indexes (p < 0.001). Logistic regression showed a significant association of post-COVID-19 MDE with physical symptomatology (p = 0.02) and Systemic Immune-Inflammatory Index (p = 0.04). Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves displayed a discriminative potential for this association (AUC = 0.921). These results highlight the specific clinical presentation of post-COVID-19 MDE, with prominent physical symptoms and increased inflammation levels, suggesting that a more careful characterization might inform personalized interventions and promote full functional recovery in these patients.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.



