Journal of Clinical Medicine (May 2023)

Frequency and Predictors of Relapses following SARS-CoV-2 Vaccination in Patients with Multiple Sclerosis: Interim Results from a Longitudinal Observational Study

  • Niklas Frahm,
  • Firas Fneish,
  • David Ellenberger,
  • Judith Haas,
  • Micha Löbermann,
  • Melanie Peters,
  • Dieter Pöhlau,
  • Anna-Lena Röper,
  • Sarah Schilling,
  • Alexander Stahmann,
  • Herbert Temmes,
  • Friedemann Paul,
  • Uwe Klaus Zettl

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12113640
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
p. 3640

Abstract

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Despite protection from severe COVID-19 courses through vaccinations, some people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS) are vaccination-hesitant due to fear of post-vaccination side effects/increased disease activity. The aim was to reveal the frequency and predictors of post-SARS-CoV-2-vaccination relapses in PwMS. This prospective, observational study was conducted as a longitudinal Germany-wide online survey (baseline survey and two follow-ups). Inclusion criteria were age ≥18 years, MS diagnosis, and ≥1 SARS-CoV-2 vaccination. Patient-reported data included socio-demographics, MS-related data, and post-vaccination phenomena. Annualized relapse rates (ARRs) of the study cohort and reference cohorts from the German MS Registry were compared pre- and post-vaccination. Post-vaccination relapses were reported by 9.3% PwMS (247/2661). The study cohort’s post-vaccination ARR was 0.189 (95% CI: 0.167–0.213). The ARR of a matched unvaccinated reference group from 2020 was 0.147 (0.129–0.167). Another reference cohort of vaccinated PwMS showed no indication of increased post-vaccination relapse activity (0.116; 0.088–0.151) compared to pre-vaccination (0.109; 0.084–0.138). Predictors of post-vaccination relapses (study cohort) were missing immunotherapy (OR = 2.09; 1.55–2.79; p p < 0.001). Data on disease activity of the study cohort in the temporal context are expected for the third follow-up.

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