of the COVID-19 pandemic, there are concerns about mental health implications, especially among people susceptible to serious illness or death from COVID-19 due to pre-existing medical conditions.
A living systematic review (ie, a systematic review that is continually updated) found that general mental health, anxiety, and depression symptoms did not worsen substantively in the general population in the early months of the pandemic.
Among people with pre-existing medical conditions, however, anxiety symptoms worsened significantly (three studies; n=2053; standardised mean difference [SMD] 0·27 [95% CI 0·01 to 0·54]) but depression symptoms did not change (three studies; N=2006; SMD 0·01 [–0·15 to 0·17]).
,
Our Scleroderma Patient-centered Intervention Network (SPIN) Cohort study,
which was included in the COVID-19 living systematic review,
found that anxiety symptoms increased substantially from before COVID-19 to April 9–27, 2020 (n=435; SMD 0·51 [95% CI 0·37 to 0·64]) but depression symptoms did not (n=388; SMD –0·05 [–0·19 to 0·09]).
The objective of the present study was to follow up our previous systemic sclerosis COVID-19 mental health study, which reported findings up until April 9–27, 2020
to describe anxiety and depression symptom trajectories from late-2019 to March, 2021. Detailed methods are provided in the appendix (pp 2–3). Researchers developed study objectives and methods in collaboration with an eight-member patient advisory team.
,
who enrolled separately in the SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort from April 9–27, 2020. Deterministic linking (email addresses) was used to merge sociodemographic, medical, and anxiety and depression symptom data before COVID-19 from the SPIN Cohort with anxiety and depression symptom data collected from April 9–27, 2020, to March, 2021, via the SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort. The SPIN (number MP-05-2013-150) and SPIN-COVID-19 (number 2021-2286) Cohorts were approved by the research ethics committee of the Centre intégré universitaire de santé et de services sociaux du Centre-Ouest-de-l’Île-de-Montréal. The SPIN Cohort was also approved by ethics committees of SPIN recruiting sites.
SPIN Cohort participants provided written informed consent for participation and to be contacted about additional studies. For pre-COVID-19 SPIN Cohort measures, we used the last anxiety (PROMIS Anxiety 4a version 1.0; assessed every 3 months) and depression (eight-item Patient Health Questionnaire; assessed every 6 months) symptom assessments between July 1 and Dec 31, 2019. We assessed anxiety and depression symptoms during the COVID-19 pandemic with the same measures every 2 weeks from April 9 until July 22, 2020, and then every 4 weeks. We used multivariate imputation via chained equations to account for missing data. Statistical analysis methods are shown in the appendix (p 4).

FigureAnxiety and depression scores before and during the COVID-19 pandemic
Compared with before the COVID-19 pandemic, anxiety symptoms increased substantially when assessed April 9–27, 2020, whereas depression symptoms did not. Both anxiety and depression symptoms improved later in 2020, with anxiety symptoms returning to pre-COVID-19 levels and depression symptoms slightly lower than the pre-pandemic level.
people with systemic sclerosis reported a substantial increase in anxiety symptoms, but not in depression symptoms. Among the general population studies, mental health improved by late-2020,
which is consistent with findings from our systemic sclerosis cohort.
Among studies included in the review, the largest were an initial report of the SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort (n=435)
and a study of 1504 people with rheumatoid arthritis (n=1126), osteoarthritis (n=277), or systemic lupus erythematosus (n=101),
which found that from 2019, to March to June, 2020, anxiety increased by a SMD of 0·26 (95% CI 0·19 to 0·33; n=1504), whereas depression symptoms were stable (0·04 [–0·03 to 0·11]; n=1504).
members of our patient advisory team were unanimous in encouraging the prioritisation of anxiety for monitoring and for the primary trial outcome, which we did. They believed that people with systemic sclerosis would have increased anxiety due to their susceptibility to poor outcomes if infected with SARS-CoV-2 and due to restrictions in health-care access, which made managing their condition difficult. They thought that depression symptoms would be less influenced because, in their opinion, many people with systemic sclerosis already had to cope with some degree of isolation and had developed resilience.
and the comparison of pre-COVID-19 mental health symptoms with data collected throughout the pandemic. Some limitations should also be considered. The SPIN Cohort is a convenience sample, and those who enrolled in the SPIN-COVID-19 Cohort were a subset of SPIN Cohort participants; thus, they might not be representative of all people with systemic sclerosis. Furthermore, participants completed questionnaires online, which might further reduce generalisability due to the need to be able to access and complete forms via the internet.
To summarise, anxiety symptoms, but not depression symptoms, increased substantially among people with systemic sclerosis early in the pandemic. Anxiety symptoms decreased quickly thereafter and returned to levels from before the pandemic. This finding, however, is an aggregate pattern. The pandemic has affected individuals in different ways, and some people with systemic sclerosis who did not previously have mental health difficulties are likely to have had new challenges. Health-care providers should understand that, overall, people with systemic sclerosis appear to be resilient, but that there are likely to be some people who are struggling and would benefit from assessment and mental health support.
RSH, LK, M-EC, SP, SJB, LM, JV, ABe, BDT, and members of the SPIN-COVID-19 patient advisory team were responsible for study concept and design. RSH, LK, M-EC, ABo, ABe, and BDT were responsible for data acquisition. RSH and LK directly accessed and verified the data. RSH, ZN, and ABe were responsible for statistical analysis. RSH and BDT drafted the manuscript. All authors provided critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content, approved the final version, and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work. LM reports personal fees from Actelion/Johnson & Johnson; grants from LFB; non-financial support from Octapharma; and non-financial support from Grifols, all outside the submitted work. All other authors declare no competing interests. De-identified individual participant data with a data dictionary and analysis codes that were used to generate the results reported in this Comment will be made available upon request to the corresponding author and presentation of a methodologically sound proposal that is approved by the SPIN data access and publications committee. Data will be available after publication. Data requesters will need to sign a data transfer agreement. The study was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (number VR4-172745, GA4-177764), McGill Interdisciplinary Initiative in Infection and Immunity Emergency COVID-19 Research Fund; Scleroderma Canada, made possible by an educational grant for patient support programming from Boehringer Ingelheim; Scleroderma Society of Ontario; Scleroderma Manitoba; Scleroderma Atlantic; Scleroderma Australia; Scleroderma New South Wales; Scleroderma Victoria; Scleroderma Queensland; Scleroderma SASK; Scleroderma Association of BC; and Sclérodermie Québec. RSH and ZN were supported by Mitacs post-doctoral fellowship awards, ABe was supported by a Fonds de recherche du Québec—Santé senior researcher salary award, and BDT was supported by a tier 1 Canada Research Chair, all outside of the submitted work. No sponsor had any role in the study design, data collection, data analysis, or interpretation, writing of the report, or in the decision to submit for publication.
Supplementary Material
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Published: December 03, 2021
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