Abstract

After the mass-vaccination campaign during the influenza A (H1N1) 2009 pandemic, a significant increase in narcolepsy incidence was observed initially in Scandinavia, later in other European countries and recently also in Canada. Narcolepsy is a sleep disease caused by the loss of hypocretin-producing cells in the hypothalamus. Almost all narcolepsy patients carry the HLA-DQB1*0602 allele, giving a link to an autoimmune-mediated process. Most of the observed narcolepsy cases were correlated to the vaccination with Pandemrix, the most frequently used vaccine in the EU, and a slight connection to Arepanrix was also detected, which was distributed in Canada. Both vaccines were adjuvanted with AS03, suggesting a possible link between AS03 and narcolepsy. No narcolepsy cases were detected with MF59-adjuvanted or non-adjuvanted influenza vaccines. Recent studies reported differences between Pandemrix and Arepanrix and suggested the vaccine rather than the adjuvant as a suspect for narcolepsy development following vaccination. In addition, in China an increase of narcolepsy cases was reported to occur in absence of vaccination. Possible factors and potential additive effects that may have triggered narcolepsy after the pandemic vaccination are being reviewed in this paper.

Highlights

  • Influenza viruses belong to the Orthomyxoviridae family and are divided into three classes: A, B and C

  • An antigenic shift that is a new recombination of gene segments which can occur when a host is infected with influenza viruses from different species, leading to a formation of a completely new strain

  • Peptide radioimmunoassays in the post-mortem brain tissue of narcoleptic patients were performed and the results indicated a loss of preprohypocretin RNA and hypocretin peptides, representing significant differences when compared with control patients [92]

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Summary

Introduction

Influenza viruses belong to the Orthomyxoviridae family and are divided into three classes: A, B and C. A cohort study made in Sweden revealed a 6.6-fold increase of narcolepsy cases in individuals vaccinated with Pandemrix, compared to those not vaccinated, with an absolute risk of 3.6 per 100,000 vaccinated subjects [124].

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