Clinical characterization and treatment outcomes of intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage after vaccination against COVID-19: A systematic review of the literature

Jin Pyeong Jeon, Chung Liang Chai, Jong Kook Rhim, Jeong Jin Park, Yong Jun Cho, Seung Hun Sheen

Published: 2021-11-22 DOI: 10.17504/protocols.io.bz8vp9w6

Abstract

As the number of COVID-19 vaccines increases, reports of complications are also increasing. In particular, when cerebral hemorrhage occurs, the prognosis is poor. Here, we aimed to investigating the clinical course of patients who developed intracerebral hemorrhage after COVID-19 vaccination and the patient prognosis through a systematic review.

As coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hit the world like never before, there were 244,105,621 infection cases and 4,959,347 deaths worldwide as of October 24, 2021. As the number of vaccination increases, reports of death and serious adverse reactions after vaccination are also increasing.

Steps

1.

Review title

Clinical characterization and treatment outcomes of intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage after vaccination against COVID-19: A systematic review of the literature

2.

Anticipated or actual start date

20 Novermber 2021

3.

Anticipated completion date

20 February 2022

4.

Stage of review at time of this submission

ABC
Review stargeYesNo
Piloting of the study selection processNoNo
Formal screening of search results against eligibility criteriaNoNo
Data extractionNoNo
Risk of bias (quality) assessmentNoNo
Data analysisNoNo
5.

Funding sources/sponsors

This study received funding from the National Research Foundation of Korea funded by the Ministry of Education

Grant number(s)

2020R1l1A3070726

2021R1A6A3A01087921

6.

Conflict of interest

None

7.

Review question

Participants: Patients of intracerebral and subarachnoid hemorrhage after vaccination against COVID-19

Exposure: Vaccination against COVID-19

Type of vaccination: To compare complications based on various vaccine types

Outcome: Presence of ICH, cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT), thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS), death

8.

Searches

MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Google Scholar

9.

Condition or domain being studied

As the number of COVID-19 vaccines increases, reports of complications are also increasing. In particular, when cerebral hemorrhage occurs, the prognosis is poor. Here, we aimed to investigating the clinical course of patients who developed intracerebral hemorrhage after COVID-19 vaccination and the patient prognosis through a systematic review.

As coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) hit the world like never before, there were 244,105,621 infection cases and 4, 959,347 deaths worldwide as of October 24, 2021. As the number of vaccination increases, reports of death and serious adverse reactions after vaccination are also increasing.

10.

Participants/population

Specify the participants or populations being studied in the review. The preferred format includes details of both inclusion and exclusion criteria.

Inclusion criteria (Pai 2021):

  1. A patient who visited the hospital for ICH after receiving COVID-19 vaccine

  2. ICH that occurred within 28 days after vaccination

  3. Spontaneous cerebral hemorrhage

Exclusion criteria:

  1. ICH after COVID-19 infection

  2. Patients with ICH without prior history of COVID-19 vaccination

  3. ICH that are caused by after traumatic brain injury

  4. ICH that occurred beyond 28 days after vaccination

Definitions:

  1. COVID-19 vaccine:
  • ChAdOx1 nCoV-20' (AZ),

  • mRNA (Pfizer and Moderna),

  • Ad26.COV2.S (Johnson & Johnson)

  1. Intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) was defined as hemorrhage in cerebrum as the predominate lesion. Those with concomitant SAH were included in this study. However, pure SAH alone was not included in this study.

  2. COVID-19 infection: diagnosed by any means as reported.

References:

Pai M, et al. Vaccine-induced prothrombotic immune thrombocytopenia VIPIT following AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccination: interim guidance for healthcare professionals in emergency department and inpatient setting. Science Brief of the Ontario COVID-19 Science Advisory Table. 2021;1(21).

11.

Intervention(s), exposure(s)

There is no designated intervention or exposure in this study because the aim of this review is narrative outcome data.

12.

Comparator(s)/control

There is no designated intervention or exposure in this study because the aim of this review is narrative outcome data.

13.

Types of study to be included

Inclusion criteria: all types of article as long as the data is available

  1. Randomized studies

  2. Non-randomized studies

  3. Studies without control: Case series, case reports, brief communication, or other equivalent

Exclusion criteria:

Study not reported in English

14.

Context

Hospital setting

15.

Main outcome(s)

  1. Presence of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH)

  2. Presence of cerebral venous thrombosis (CVT)

  3. Presence of thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome (TTS)

  4. Functional outcome measured by modified Rankin scale at discharge

Measures of effect

Counts of ICH, CVT, TTS

Timing: within 28 days after receiving COVID-19 vaccine

16.

Additional outcome(s)

None

17.

Data extraction (selection and coding)

Dr. Jeon and Dr. Chai work independently on study selection according to the aforementioned inclusion and exclusion criteria. Dr. Jeon and Dr. Chai work independently on extraction of data from included studies using a pre-piloted form.

18.

Risk of bias (quality) assessment

Outcomes listed below is specified to be assessed using GRADE for quality of evidence and presented in the summary of findings (Guyatt, 2011).

All disagreement and accuracy will be resolved by discussion between Jeon and Chai

References:

Gordon H. Guyatt et al. GRADE guidelines: 1. Introduction GRADE evidence profiles and summary of findings tables. Journal of Clinical Epidemiology 64 (2011) 383e394 doi: 10.1016/j.jclinepi.2010.04.026

19.

Strategy for data synthesis

Qualitative:

GRADE for the certainty of evidence

Quantitative:

If data is not suitable for pooling, a narrative synthesis will be performed.

20.

Analysis of subgroups or subsets

None

21.

Type and method of review

Epidemiologic, Meta-analysis, Narrative synthesis, COVID-19, Vaccines

22.

Language

English

23.

Other registration details

Will be registered in PROSPERO, with details to be updated when available

24.

Keywords

COVID vaccine, intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral venous thrombosis, thrombosis with thrombocytopenia syndrome

25.

Current review status

Ongoing

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