Guillain–Barré Syndrome and COVID-19 Vaccine: A Multicenter Retrospective Study of 46 Cases

Author:

Castiglione Juan Ignacio1ORCID,Crespo José Manuel1,Bendersky Mariana2,Silveira Facundo Oscar3,Lecchini Lucila4,Luis María Belén5,Zambrano Francisco Caiza1,Cotti Norberto6,Simison Conrado J.7,Aguirre Florencia7,Piedrabuena María Agustina6,Alonso Ricardo Nicolás5,Azcona Carolina Laura3,Sosa Pablo Sebastian3,Maldonado Evangelina4,Varela Francisco1,Bettini Mariela3,Rey Roberto D.2,Cejas Luciana León1,Rugiero Marcelo3,Reisin Ricardo1,Barroso Fabio1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, FLENI, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

2. Department of Neurology, Sanatorio Finochietto, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

3. Department of Neurology, Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

4. Department of Neurology, Hospital Nacional Alejandro Posadas, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

5. Department of Neurology, Sanatorio Güemes, Buenos Aires, Argentina;

6. Department of Neurology, Sanatorio de los Arcos, Buenos Aires, Argentina; and

7. Department of Neurology, Hospital J.M. Ramos Mejía, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Abstract

Abstract In the context of the global vaccination campaign against COVID-19, several cases of postvaccinal Guillain–Barré syndrome (GBS) were reported. Whether a causal relationship exists between these events has yet to be established. We investigated the clinical and electromyographic characteristics of patients who developed GBS after COVID-19 vaccination and compare these with findings in patients with GBS, without a history of recent vaccination. We included 91 cases between March 2020 and March 2022, treated at 10 referral hospitals of Buenos Aires, Argentina. Of these, 46 had received vaccination against COVID-19 within the previous month. Although Medical Research Council sum-scores were similar in both groups (median 52 vs. 50; P = 0.4), cranial nerve involvement was significantly more frequent in the postvaccination group (59% vs. 38%; P = 0.02), as was bilateral facial paralysis (57% vs. 24%; P = 0.002). No differences were found in clinical or neurophysiological phenotypes, although 17 subjects presented the variant of bilateral facial palsy with paresthesias (11 vs. 6; P = 0.1); nor were significant differences observed in length of hospital stay or mortality rates. Future vaccine safety monitoring and epidemiology studies are essential to demonstrate any potential causal relationship between these events.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology,General Medicine

Reference27 articles.

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