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Abstract Details

Long-Term Outcomes of Guillain-Barre Syndrome Associated with Zika Virus Infection
General Neurology
P4 - Poster Session 4 (5:30 PM-6:30 PM)
7-025
To analyze the long-term functional and neurologic outcomes of patients with Zika virus (ZIKV)-associated Guillain-Barre syndrome (GBS) and compare with non-GBS control subjects in Colombia.
GBS has been linked with ZIKV infection; GBS incidence in areas with ZIKV epidemics is higher than expected.  Long-term outcomes of ZIKV-associated GBS have been anecdotally described as poorer than expected, but systematic data are lacking.
We enrolled 34 ZIKV-associated GBS cases with acute neurologic onset during spring 2016 in Barranquilla, Colombia, and re-assessed them a median of 17 months later from first report of neurologic onset.  Neurologic examinations, and instruments assessing function, mood, and disability were administered.  We performed the same assessments on a sampling of Barranquilla residents of similar age and sex distribution who did not develop GBS.
Median age of cases at GBS onset was 49 years (range, 10-80); 17 (50%) were male.  Proportion of patients with complete recovery (67.6%) was comparable to that described in GBS literature.  At follow-up, Hughes GBS Disability score (mean, 1.2, range 0-4), Overall Disability Sum Score (ODSS) (mean 1.2, range 0-7), and Zung Depression Score (mean 34.4, range 20-56) indicated mild / moderate ongoing disability.  When compared to the Barranquilla population sample (n=368), ZIKV-associated GBS cases and controls were similar in prevalence of self-reported physical and mental health issues, though GBS patients were more likely to have an ODSS >1 (OR 8.8, 95% CI 3.2 - 24.5) indicating ongoing motor weakness, and trended towards reporting restricted activity due to health issues for >10 days in the previous month (OR 2.4, 95%CI 0.7-6.7).
Our findings suggest that long-term self-reported physical and mental status among persons with ZIKV-associated GBS after 1 year are similar to persons without GBS, but GBS patients more likely suffer ongoing motor deficits.  Further long-term clinical and epidemiologic assessments of ZIKV-associated GBS are needed.
Authors/Disclosures

PRESENTER
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James J. Sejvar, MD, FAAN (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) Dr. Sejvar has nothing to disclose.