Self-reported loss of smell without nasal obstruction to identify COVID-19. The multicenter Coranosmia cohort study

Archive ouverte

Salmon Ceron, Dominique | Bartier, Sophie | Hautefort, Charlotte | Nguyen, Yann | Nevoux, Jérôme | Hamel, Anne-Laure | Camhi, Yohan | Canouï-Poitrine, Florence | Verillaud, Benjamin | Slama, Dorsaf | Haim-Boukobza, Stephanie | Sourdeau, Elise | Cantin, Delphine | Corré, Alain | Bryn, Agnes | Etienne, Nicolas | Rozenberg, Flore | Layese, Richard | Papon, Jean-François | Bequignon, Emilie

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. Objectives: To determine the frequency of SARS-CoV-2 positive samples in a subset of patients consulting for primarily isolated acute (<7 days) loss of smell and to assess the diagnostic accuracy of olfactory/gustatory dysfunction for COVID-19 diagnosis in the overall population tested for COVID-19 in the same period.Methods: Prospective multicentric cohort study in four olfactory ENT units and a screening center for COVID-19.Results: i) Among a subset of 55 patients consulting for primarily recent loss of smell, we found that 51 (92.7%) had a COVID-19 positive test (median viral load of 28.8 cycle threshold). Loss of smell was mostly total (anosmia), rarely associated with nasal obstruction but associated with a taste disorder in 80%. Olfactory dysfunction occurred suddenly, either as first complaint or preceded by mild symptoms occurring a median of 3 days. The majority of patients (72.9%) partially recovered the sense of smell within 15 days. ii) In a population of 1824 patients tested for COVID-19, the positive predictive value and the specificity of loss of smell and/or taste were 78.5% and 90.3% respectively (sensitivity (40.8%), negative predictive value (63.6%)).Conclusions: Self-reported loss of smell had a high predictive positive value to identify COVID-19. Making this sign well known publicly could help to adopt isolation measures and inform potential contacts.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Long COVID and the brain network of Proust's madeleine: targeting the olfactory pathway

Archive ouverte | Guedj, Eric | CCSD

International audience. We detail in this Commentary our hypothesis of functional brain dysfunction in patients with long Covid in relation with the impairment of olfactory pathways, and discuss possible implication...

Clinical, virological and imaging profile in patients with prolonged forms of COVID-19: A cross-sectional study

Archive ouverte | Salmon-Ceron, Dominique | CCSD

International audience. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on E...

The Prognostic Value of Olfactory Dysfunction in Patients with COVID-19: The COVIDORA Study

Archive ouverte | Hamel, Anne-Laure | CCSD

Background: Among all studies describing COVID-19 clinical features during the first wave of the pandemic, only a few retrospective studies have assessed the correlation between olfac-tory dysfunction (OD) and the evolution of dis...

Chargement des enrichissements...