| Literature DB >> 34607722 |
Eva Z Reininghaus1, Mirko Manchia2, Nina Dalkner1, Nina Bonkat1, Alessio Squassina3, Isabel Hodl4, Eduard Vieta5, Andreas Reif6, Tomas Hajek7, Mikael Landén8, Christoph U Correll9, Jan Scott10, Bruno Etain11, Marcella Rietschel12, Veerle Bergink13, Monica Martinez-Cengotitabengoa14, Lars Vedel Kessing15, Andrea Fagiolini16, Michael Bauer17, Guy Goodwin18, Ana Gonzalez-Pinto19, Ralph W Kupka20, Thomas G Schulze21, Trine V Lagerberg22, Ayşegül Yildiz23, Chantal Henry24, Gunnar Morken25, Phillip Ritter17, René Ernst Nieslen26, Rasmus W Licht26, Andreas Bechdolf27, Ole A Andreassen28, Frederike Tabea Fellendorf1.
Abstract
Bipolar disorder (BD) might be associated with higher infection rates of coronavirus disease (COVID-19) which in turn could result in worsening the clinical course and outcome. This may be due to a high prevalence of somatic comorbidities and an increased risk of delays in and poorer treatment of somatic disease in patients with severe mental illness in general. Vaccination is the most important public health intervention to tackle the ongoing pandemic. We undertook a systematic review regarding the data on vaccinations in individuals with BD. Proportion of prevalence rates, efficacy and specific side effects of vaccinations and in individuals with BD were searched. Results show that only five studies have investigated vaccinations in individuals with BD, which substantially limits the interpretation of overall findings. Studies on antibody production after vaccinations in BD are very limited and results are inconsistent. Also, the evidence-based science on side effects of vaccinations in individuals with BD so far is poor.Entities:
Keywords: Bipolar disorder; COVID-19; Infectious diseases; Systematic review; Vaccination
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34607722 PMCID: PMC8429356 DOI: 10.1016/j.euroneuro.2021.09.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Neuropsychopharmacol ISSN: 0924-977X Impact factor: 4.600
Fig. 1Flow-chart of literature search on vaccination and BD.
Studies investigating vaccinations in bipolar disorder.
| Population | Study aim/ Primary outcome measure | Study design | Bipolar specific measures | Results | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BD | Efficacy of Hepatitis B vaccination/ Hbs antibody concentration | One group with 20 µg Recombivax HB at 0,1 and 6 months, comparison to other studies with other target groups | Pre-existing diagnosis | 73% showed no response Lower response than comparison-study | |
| Ford et al., 2018 | BD | Immunity against measles with USA typical vaccination program/ Measles IgG antibodies | three patient groups, one control group, no intervention | Age | Immunity was lower in MDD than in HC, but no difference between BD and HC (explanation small sample size) age as predictor |
| BD | Antitetanus antibodies in BD and SZ after vaccination | Cross-sectional, no intervention | Age | Antibodies below the limit: BD 12%, SZ 8% antibody levels above the range: SZ 4.6% | |
| BD | Association between vaccination and psychiatric disorder/ Incidence of psychiatric disorder 12 months before and 3 and 6 months after vaccination | Cross-sectional, Case-control, retrospective analysis, no intervention | Age | BD was negatively associated with influenza vaccine in the previous 3 or 6 months (hazard ratio 0.71 and 0.84); positive associations with AN, OCD and chronic tic disorder | |
| 11.955 individuals, whereof 1.004 with reported pre-pandemic psychiatric diagnoses, including BD | Vaccination hesitancy in the UK | Survey April and November 2020, no intervention | Pre-existing diagnosis | Some somatic conditions but not pre-existing psychiatric diagnoses were related to a lower likelihood of being vaccine hesitant against COVID-19 |
Note: ADHD=Attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, AN=Anorexia nervosa, BD=Bipolar disorder, HC.