Background: The aim of this study was to identify patient clusters based on acute symptom profiles and individual characteristics most likely to develop pediatric post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), as well as clusters among patients with PASC based on post-acute sequelae and associated characteristics. Methods: This multicenter cohort study in 12 Italian pediatric units enrolled patients aged 0–17 years within three months of a laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Participants who completed at least two surveys developed by the ISARIC over one year were analyzed. PASC was defined per WHO criteria. Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Hierarchical Clustering were performed. Results: Of 1137 children enrolled, 850 (76%) completed at least two surveys. The most prevalent age group was older children (6–11 years) (46%); adolescents (12–17) and young children (0–5) were numerically similar. Males were more represented (51.9%), except for the adolescent group (45.1%). PASC occurred in 32.8% of participants, with the distribution of sequelae types varying by age. Clustering in COVID-19 cases identified three clusters: young children mainly presented with respiratory symptoms and with a higher risk of hospitalization, while older children were spared in both acute and post-acute phases. Adolescents, particularly females, reported more pronounced acute symptoms and developed PASC more frequently. Clustering analysis of cases with PASC identified three clusters, confirming these age-related patterns. Young children still exhibited respiratory sequelae, and older children confirmed good recovery with minimal complications, while adolescents, especially females, remained the most affected subgroup, reporting persistent neuropsychological sequelae such as fatigue and insomnia. Conclusions: Findings support age-tailored follow-up, emphasizing respiratory monitoring for young children and targeted neuropsychological care for adolescents, particularly girls.

Phenotyping Pediatric Long COVID: Symptom Clusters from a Longitudinal Multicenter Italian Cohort / Esposito, Susanna Maria Roberta; Maglietta, Giuseppe; Campana, Beatrice Rita; Fainardi, Valentina; Poeta, Marco; Zampogna, Stefania; Colomba, Claudia; Suppiej, Agnese; Cardinale, Fabio; Bosis, Samantha; Castagnola, Elio; Midulla, Fabio; Giaquinto, Carlo; Giordano, Paola; Biasucci, Giacomo; Nunziata, Francesco; Grandinetti, Roberto; Condemi, Anna; Raiola, Giuseppe; Guarino, Alfredo; Diodati, Francesca; Caminiti, Caterina. - In: CHILDREN. - ISSN 2227-9067. - (2026). [10.3390/children13020279]

Phenotyping Pediatric Long COVID: Symptom Clusters from a Longitudinal Multicenter Italian Cohort

Susanna Maria Roberta Esposito;Giuseppe Maglietta
;
Beatrice Rita Campana;Valentina Fainardi;Giacomo Biasucci;Roberto Grandinetti;Giuseppe Raiola;Caterina Caminiti
2026-01-01

Abstract

Background: The aim of this study was to identify patient clusters based on acute symptom profiles and individual characteristics most likely to develop pediatric post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection (PASC), as well as clusters among patients with PASC based on post-acute sequelae and associated characteristics. Methods: This multicenter cohort study in 12 Italian pediatric units enrolled patients aged 0–17 years within three months of a laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection. Participants who completed at least two surveys developed by the ISARIC over one year were analyzed. PASC was defined per WHO criteria. Multiple Correspondence Analysis and Hierarchical Clustering were performed. Results: Of 1137 children enrolled, 850 (76%) completed at least two surveys. The most prevalent age group was older children (6–11 years) (46%); adolescents (12–17) and young children (0–5) were numerically similar. Males were more represented (51.9%), except for the adolescent group (45.1%). PASC occurred in 32.8% of participants, with the distribution of sequelae types varying by age. Clustering in COVID-19 cases identified three clusters: young children mainly presented with respiratory symptoms and with a higher risk of hospitalization, while older children were spared in both acute and post-acute phases. Adolescents, particularly females, reported more pronounced acute symptoms and developed PASC more frequently. Clustering analysis of cases with PASC identified three clusters, confirming these age-related patterns. Young children still exhibited respiratory sequelae, and older children confirmed good recovery with minimal complications, while adolescents, especially females, remained the most affected subgroup, reporting persistent neuropsychological sequelae such as fatigue and insomnia. Conclusions: Findings support age-tailored follow-up, emphasizing respiratory monitoring for young children and targeted neuropsychological care for adolescents, particularly girls.
2026
Phenotyping Pediatric Long COVID: Symptom Clusters from a Longitudinal Multicenter Italian Cohort / Esposito, Susanna Maria Roberta; Maglietta, Giuseppe; Campana, Beatrice Rita; Fainardi, Valentina; Poeta, Marco; Zampogna, Stefania; Colomba, Claudia; Suppiej, Agnese; Cardinale, Fabio; Bosis, Samantha; Castagnola, Elio; Midulla, Fabio; Giaquinto, Carlo; Giordano, Paola; Biasucci, Giacomo; Nunziata, Francesco; Grandinetti, Roberto; Condemi, Anna; Raiola, Giuseppe; Guarino, Alfredo; Diodati, Francesca; Caminiti, Caterina. - In: CHILDREN. - ISSN 2227-9067. - (2026). [10.3390/children13020279]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11381/3048813
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