COVID-19 vaccination and Guillain-Barré syndrome: analyses using the National Immunoglobulin Database

Author:

Keh Ryan Y S12ORCID,Scanlon Sophie3,Datta-Nemdharry Preeti3,Donegan Katherine3,Cavanagh Sally4,Foster Mark5,Skelland David6,Palmer James4,Machado Pedro M17ORCID,Keddie Stephen178ORCID,Carr Aisling S17,Lunn Michael P17ORCID,Manji Hadi,Lavin Tim,Lilleker James B,Gosal David,Hadden Robert DM,Watson-Fargie Taylor,Brennan Kathryn,Themistocleous Andreas,Deeb Jacquie,Romeiro Ana,Mehta Puja R,Kullmann Dimitri,Miller James,Elsaddig Amar,Molyneux Adam,Georgiev Plamen,Ben-Joseph Aaron,Holt James,Roelofs Jacob,Alkufri Fadi,Allen David,Shields Simon,Murphy Stephen,Sivasathiaseelan Harri,Sylvester Richard,Al-Saleh Abdul,Roberts Rhys,Nithi Kannan,Handdunnethi Lahiru,Wannop Kate,Batla Amit,Sadnicka Anna,Sivaganasundaram Jananee,Yermakova Tatyana,Dasari Ravi,Quattrocchi Graziella,Ball Harriet,Cooper Rebecca,Whittam Daniel,Mustafa Mohanned,Yiin Gabriel,Ashjaei Shayan,Westwood Andrew J,Dsouza Michelle,Foo Eng Chuan,Tun Shwe Zin,Lwin Khine Khine,Kanabar Gorande,

Affiliation:

1. MRC Centre for Neuromuscular Diseases, National Hospital of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square, University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust , London , UK

2. Manchester Centre for Clinical Neurosciences, Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust , Manchester , UK

3. Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency , UK

4. NHS England & Improvement (NHSEI), National Health Service , London , UK

5. Medical Data Solutions and Services , Ardwick, Manchester , UK

6. NHS Arden and Greater East Midlands (GEM) Commissioning Support Unit (CSU) , Warwick , UK

7. Institute of Neurology, University College London , London , UK

8. Department of Neurology, The Royal London Hospital, Barts Health NHS Trust , London , UK

Abstract

Abstract Vaccination against viruses has rarely been associated with Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), and an association with the COVID-19 vaccine is unknown. We performed a population-based study of National Health Service data in England and a multicentre surveillance study from UK hospitals to investigate the relationship between COVID-19 vaccination and GBS. Firstly, case dates of GBS identified retrospectively in the National Immunoglobulin Database from 8 December 2021 to 8 July 2021 were linked to receipt dates of COVID-19 vaccines using data from the National Immunisation Management System in England. For the linked dataset, GBS cases temporally associated with vaccination within a 6-week risk window of any COVID-19 vaccine were identified. Secondly, we prospectively collected incident UK-wide (four nations) GBS cases from 1 January 2021 to 7 November 2021 in a separate UK multicentre surveillance database. For this multicentre UK-wide surveillance dataset, we explored phenotypes of reported GBS cases to identify features of COVID-19 vaccine-associated GBS. Nine hundred and ninety-six GBS cases were recorded in the National Immunoglobulin Database from January to October 2021. A spike of GBS cases above the 2016–2020 average occurred in March–April 2021. One hundred and ninety-eight GBS cases occurred within 6 weeks of the first-dose COVID-19 vaccination in England [0.618 cases per 100,000 vaccinations; 176 ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 (AstraZeneca), 21 tozinameran (Pfizer) and one mRNA-1273 (Moderna)]. The 6-week excess of GBS (compared to the baseline rate of GBS cases 6–12 weeks after vaccination) occurred with a peak at 24 days post-vaccination; first-doses of ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 accounted for the excess. No excess was seen for second-dose vaccination. The absolute number of excess GBS cases from January–July 2021 was between 98–140 cases for first-dose ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccination. First-dose tozinameran and second-dose of any vaccination showed no excess GBS risk. Detailed clinical data from 121 GBS patients were reported in the separate multicentre surveillance dataset during this timeframe. No phenotypic or demographic differences identified between vaccine-associated and non-vaccinated GBS cases occurring in the same timeframe. Analysis of the linked NID/NIMS dataset suggested that first-dose ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 vaccination is associated with an excess GBS risk of 0.576 (95% confidence interval 0.481–0.691) cases per 100 000 doses. However, examination of a multicentre surveillance dataset suggested that no specific clinical features, including facial weakness, are associated with vaccination-related GBS compared to non-vaccinated cases. The pathogenic cause of the ChAdOx1 nCoV-19 specific first dose link warrants further study.

Funder

National Institute for Health Research

University College London Hospitals

Biomedical Research Centre

GBS-CIDP Foundation International

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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