Varicella zoster virus-induced neurological disease after COVID-19 vaccination: a retrospective monocentric study

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Abstract

The description of every possible adverse effect or event related to vaccines is mandatory during the ongoing worldwide COVID-19 vaccination program. Although cases of cutaneous varicella zoster virus (VZV) reactivation after COVID-19 vaccination have been increasingly reported in literature and database sets, a description of VZV-induced neurological disease (VZV-ND) is still lacking. In the present study, we retrospectively evaluated patients admitted to our clinic and diagnosed with VZV-ND during the COVID-19 vaccination campaign (January–April 2021) and in the same months in the previous two years. We identified three patients with VZV-ND after COVID-19 vaccination and 19 unvaccinated VZV-ND cases as controls. In the case–control analysis, the two groups showed no difference in clinical features, results of diagnostic investigations, and outcome. Thus, VZV reactivation with neurological involvement might be a possible event triggered by COVID-19 vaccination, but the benefit following COVID-19 vaccination overcomes significantly the potential risk associated with a VZV reactivation.

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Abu-Rumeileh, S., Mayer, B., Still, V., Tumani, H., Otto, M., & Senel, M. (2022). Varicella zoster virus-induced neurological disease after COVID-19 vaccination: a retrospective monocentric study. Journal of Neurology, 269(4), 1751–1757. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00415-021-10849-3

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