Understanding Guillain-Barré Syndrome: Causes, Symptoms, and Peru’s Epidemic

2023-07-14 13:08:00
Peru has recorded 191 cases of Guillain-Barré syndrome, an inflammatory disease affecting the nervous system, as of July 9. A state of emergency has been declared. HANDOUT / AFP

What is Guillain-Barré syndrome?

Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) is most often a rare post-infectious disease in which the immune system attacks the peripheral nervous system, the one that circulates information between the brain and the organs.

It is characterized, at first, by unusual sensations (tingling, tingling, feeling of cold) or the absence of sensitivity, as well as a feeling of weakness, fatigue and muscle cramps at rest, recalls the High Authority for Health (HAS). The disease develops rapidly and its symptoms worsen within a few days, which can lead to paralysis of the limbs, damage to the chest muscles, and even impairment of the ability to speak and swallow.

In most cases, patients recover without sequelae within a few weeks. But, “Even in the best health settings, 3% to 5% of patients die from complications of the disease, such as paralysis of the muscles of respiration, sepsis, pulmonary embolism or cardiac arrest”, summarizes the World Health Organization (WHO).

According to a 2021 report of the rare neuromuscular diseases sector (Filnemus), one of the twenty-three French national coordination structures for rare disease players, its incidence rate increases with age, ranging from 0.6 per 100,000 per year in children at 2.7 per 100,000 per year among people aged 80 and over.

Why is the situation in Peru worrying?

On June 23, the Peruvian health authorities issued an alert due to an abnormally high number of GBS cases. As of July 9, 191 cases have been detected since the start of the year, and four patients have died. However, this pathology requires very heavy care, “with 20% to 30% of intensive care admissions”, says Mahmoud Zureik, professor of epidemiology and public health at the University of Versailles-Saint-Quentin-en-Yvelines. In 2022, the total number of intensive care beds was estimated at 1,200 by Peruvian newspaper At the Republic. “There is a fear of saturation of services”confirms Nicolas Weiss, neurologist at the Pitié-Salpétrière hospital in Paris.

On Sunday July 9, the Peruvian Ministry of Health declared “the national level health emergency (…) for ninety days”. A decision that can be as health as political. “One of the reasons is also the fact that the Ministry of Health says they do not have enough care once morest GBSsays M. Weiss. Triggering the state of health emergency might allow them to access care or unlock WHO aid. » Peruvian health authorities have not communicated since.

What might be the causes of the epidemic?

Very often, this inflammatory disease is a reaction to an infection. “In two-thirds of cases, the occurrence of Guillain-Barré syndrome is preceded within three weeks to one month by an acute viral or bacterial infectious episode, in particular respiratory or digestive tract infections”specified the French Agency for the Safety of Health Products (Afssaps) in a 2009 report. But the precise cause may remain unknown. “Sometimes we don’t know because we haven’t done the big studies, which are quite expensive, with large control groups”regrets Professor Weiss.

Certain diseases are known to trigger it. So of Covid-19, as shown a review of scientific literature of 2023. Hospitalization for severe Covid even multiplies by eight the risks of developing GBS in the event of severe Covid. But this phenomenon remained “very marginal”nuance the neurologist.

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Other diseases can be the cause. French researchers have thus shown in 2016 the causal link between Zika virus infection, characterized by flu-like symptoms, and the onset of GBS. They had observed an increase in hospitalizations due to this disease at the time of the Zika virus epidemic in French Polynesia, in 2013-2014.

In the case of Peru, dengue appears as an ideal suspect. The country has been facing its most serious epidemic since June since 1990. A situation caused by the passage in the spring of Cyclone Yaku, whose torrential rains attracted the tiger mosquito, the main vector of the disease. “In time, it might fit perfectly”, agrees Professor Zureik. But not everything fits. The epidemiologist notes the surprising geographical extent of current cases of GBS, while dengue is localized in the south of the country.

Other avenues are being considered. In 2019, the Latin American country had already been hit by a historic GBS epidemic. This was caused by a bacteria transmitted through meat, Campylobacter jejunihas established a retrospective study from 2021. But between these different hypotheses, the incomplete communication of the Peruvian health authorities does not make it possible to decide, regrets Mahmoud Zureik. Dengue, Zika, virus, or unidentified bacteria… at this stage, he repeats, ” We do not know anything “. The only certainty: the cause can only be recent, within a maximum of six weeks before the onset of GBS.

Why do some people blame the Covid-19 vaccines?

Since the large-scale vaccination campaigns once morest Covid-19, anti-vaccine circles have seen every medical event as a side effect of injections. The Peruvian situation is no exception, the most active figures in this movement, who have been predicting the worst for two years, have established a link between this peak of GBS in Peru and vaccination in the country.

Read also: False deaths, misinterpreted figures: how antivaccines sow doubt regarding side effects

Guillain-Barré syndrome is a rare side effect of vaccines, especially those once morest the flu. Regarding those once morest Covid-19, the European Pharmacovigilance Risk Assessment Committee (PRAC) has recognized, in September 2022, a link to the AstraZeneca vaccine. However, it remains very rare since it affects less than one person in 10,000, remember the European Medicines Agency. A study Briton of 2021 believes that a link « probable » might be established for fifty-six GBS cases out of more than 85 million vaccinations.

In the case of Pfizer’s vaccine, GBS cases are under observation by the National Medicines Safety Agency since August 2021, but no link has ever been formally established, and the recent scientific literature is rather reassuring. Finally, vaccination with AstraZeneca has only been marginal in Peru, and dates from two years ago: difficult to see there the cause of an inflammatory reaction in 2023.

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