Stroke risk increased significantly in the
days, weeks and months after shingles appeared, despite use of the
shingles vaccine and antiviral therapy to treat it, according to
preliminary research to be presented in Honolulu at the American Stroke
Association's International Stroke Conference 2019, a world premier
meeting for researchers and clinicians dedicated to the science and
treatment of cerebrovascular disease.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) researchers studied
more than 35,000 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries who had been
diagnosed with shingles, also known as herpes zoster, and acute ischemic
stroke between 2007 and 2015. They analyzed whether having the shingles
vaccine, Zostavax, as a treatment, antiviral therapy or both after
shingles would impact patients' stroke risk.
They found that stroke
incidence jumped by 61 percent within 14 days after shingles onset. The
increased stroke risk remained elevated six months after shingles but
diminished with time.
Researchers didn't find any evidence that having the vaccine or
taking antiviral therapy once shingles appeared helped to reduce the
increased stroke risk. But the researchers suggest having the shingles
vaccine might be the most effective way to prevent shingles-associated
stroke risk.
Shingles is an often painful rash caused by the virus that causes
chicken pox. Almost one in three people in the United State will develop
shingles in their lifetime, according to CDC. The American Heart
Association recommends adults over age 50 get the shingles vaccine.
The
new vaccine, Shingrix, approved by FDA in 2017 has shown to be more than
90 percent effective at preventing shingles.
In this study, researchers
examined the effect of the Zostavax shingles vaccine because Medicare
data was not yet available for the Shingrix shingles vaccine. Zostavax
efficacy declines over time and protection from shingles only lasts
about 5 years with Zostavax.
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