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Epidemiological and cohort study finds no association between COVID-19 and Guillain-Barré syndrome

Authors :
James Holt
Ashwin Pinto
Ruth Geraldes
Ross W. Paterson
Hadi Manji
Stephen Keddie
Edward J Newman
Michael S. Zandi
Claire Allen
Aisling Carr
D. P. Rathnasabapathi
Charles R. Marshall
Simon Rinaldi
A. Kiss-csenki
Viraj Bharambe
Hugh J. Willison
Michael P. Lunn
K. Brennan
Dipa L Jayaseelan
Julia Pakpoor
O. Price
J. Wall
Christina Mousele
Pedro Machado
L. Clayton
C. J. Record
Ross Nortley
J. King-Robson
Mark P. Foster
Maya Zosmer
R. Keh
Sanjeev Rajakulendran
T. Lavin
Jane Pritchard
Menelaos Pipis
Niranjanan Nirmalananthan
Guru Kumar
Janev Fehmi
T. Yermakova
Robert D M Hadden
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2020.

Abstract

BackgroundReports of Guillain-Barré Syndrome (GBS) have emerged during the Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. This epidemiological and cohort study sought to investigate any causative association between COVID-19 infection and GBS.MethodsThe epidemiology of GBS cases reported via the UK National Immunoglobulin Database were studied from 2016-2019 and compared to cases reported during the COVID-19 pandemic. For the cohort study, members of the British Peripheral Nerve Society reported all cases of GBS during the pandemic. The clinical features, investigation findings and outcomes of COVID-19 (definite or probable) and non-COVID-19 associated GBS cases were compared.ResultsThe UK GBS incidence from 2016-2019 was 1.65-1.88 per 100,000 people per year. GBS and COVID-19 incidence varied between regions and did not correlate (r = 0.06, 95% CI −0.56 to 0.63, p=0.86). GBS incidence fell between March and May 2020 compared to the same months of 2016-2019. Forty-seven GBS cases were included in the cohort study (13 definite, 12 probable COVID-19 and 22 non-COVID-19). There were no significant differences in the pattern of weakness, time to nadir, neurophysiology, CSF findings or outcome. Intubation was more frequent in the COVID-19+ve cohort (7/13, 54% vs 5/22, 23% in COVID negative) thought to be related directly to COVID-19 pulmonary involvement.ConclusionsThis study finds no epidemiological or phenotypic clues of SARS-CoV-2 being causative of GBS. GBS incidence has fallen during the pandemic which may be the influence of lockdown measures reducing transmission of GBS inducing pathogens such as Campylobacter jejuni and respiratory viruses.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fe6aa5977ee74c507f5dd8b3567df616
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2020.07.24.20161471