| Literature DB >> 32909046 |
Zhongxing Zhang1, Jari K Gool2,3,4, Rolf Fronczek2,3, Yves Dauvilliers5, Claudio L A Bassetti6,7, Geert Mayer8, Giuseppe Plazzi9,10, Fabio Pizza9,10, Joan Santamaria11, Markku Partinen12, Sebastiaan Overeem13,14, Rosa Peraita-Adrados15, Antonio Martins da Silva16, Karel Sonka17, Rafael Del Rio-Villegas18, Raphael Heinzer19, Aleksandra Wierzbicka20, Peter Young21, Birgit Högl22, Mauro Manconi23, Eva Feketeova24, Johannes Mathis6, Teresa Paiva25, Francesca Canellas26, Michel Lecendreux27,28, Christian R Baumann29, Gert Jan Lammers2,3, Ramin Khatami1,6.
Abstract
Increased incidence rates of narcolepsy type-1 (NT1) have been reported worldwide after the 2009-2010 H1N1 influenza pandemic (pH1N1). While some European countries found an association between the NT1 incidence increase and the H1N1 vaccination Pandemrix, reports from Asian countries suggested the H1N1 virus itself to be linked to the increased NT1 incidence. Using robust data-driven modeling approaches, that is, locally estimated scatterplot smoothing methods, we analyzed the number of de novo NT1 cases (n = 508) in the last two decades using the European Narcolepsy Network database. We confirmed the peak of NT1 incidence in 2010, that is, 2.54-fold (95% confidence interval [CI]: [2.11, 3.19]) increase in NT1 onset following 2009-2010 pH1N1. This peak in 2010 was found in both childhood NT1 (2.75-fold increase, 95% CI: [1.95, 4.69]) and adulthood NT1 (2.43-fold increase, 95% CI: [2.05, 2.97]). In addition, we identified a new peak in 2013 that is age-specific for children/adolescents (i.e. 2.09-fold increase, 95% CI: [1.52, 3.32]). Most of these children/adolescents were HLA DQB1*06:02 positive and showed a subacute disease onset consistent with an immune-mediated type of narcolepsy. The new 2013 incidence peak is likely not related to Pandemrix as it was not used after 2010. Our results suggest that the increased NT1 incidence after 2009-2010 pH1N1 is not unique and our study provides an opportunity to develop new hypotheses, for example, considering other (influenza) viruses or epidemiological events to further investigate the pathophysiology of immune-mediated narcolepsy. © Sleep Research Society 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Sleep Research Society. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail journals.permissions@oup.com.Entities:
Keywords: H1N1 influenza; childhood narcolepsy; narcolepsy
Year: 2021 PMID: 32909046 DOI: 10.1093/sleep/zsaa172
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sleep ISSN: 0161-8105 Impact factor: 5.849