Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows (2024)

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  • Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows (1)

By Isabella Cueto March 4, 2024

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Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows (2)

Having Covid-19 increases a person’s risk of developing an autoimmune disease in the year after infection, a large study out of South Korea and Japan reports, but vaccination helps decrease that risk.

Researchers used the medical records of 10 million Korean and 12 million Japanese adults to see whether those who had Covid were more likely to be diagnosed with autoimmune inflammatory rheumatic diseases, or AIRDs, in the year following infection. AIRDs include rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, Sjögren syndrome, mixed connective tissue disease, vasculitis, and other conditions. The Covid group was compared with an uninfected control group and a group of patients who had influenza during the same period from 2020 to 2022.

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In both the South Korean and Japanese cohorts, the researchers found a heightened risk of autoimmune disease up to one year after Covid infection. Compared to the general population, the Covid group had about a 25% higher risk of AIRD. When compared to the group with influenza, the risk was about 30% higher in those who’d had Covid. And the more severe a person’s bout of Covid, the higher their risk of developing a new autoimmune disease, according to findings published in the Annals of Internal Medicine on Monday, underscoring why preventing infection in the first place is important.

Researchers also found that vaccination against Covid, with either mRNA or viral vector shot, reduced the risk of developing a new autoimmune disease. They did not spell out in the study exactly how much vaccines reduced the risk of AIRDs. And after the year-mark, the Covid group’s risk of AIRD returned to normal. These numbers are on the population level, so an individual’s risk could be higher or lower depending on their susceptibility.

While other researchers have reported similar findings, the new study is one of the largest to explore post-Covid complications in Asian populations, adding valuable data on vaccination and autoimmune disease in understudied ethnic groups and showcasing what researchers can learn from South Korea and Japan’s detailed, integrated health datasets. The findings provide “rigorous evidence” to further our understanding of Covid’s long-term consequences, said Alison Cohen, a professor of epidemiology and biostatistics at the University of California, San Francisco who was not involved in the study. It also “adds to the evidence base that COVID-19 is worse than the flu,” she said in an email.

Lead author Min Seo Kim, a physician-scientist at the Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT and Massachusetts General Hospital, said the drop in AIRDs risk after one year might point to a decline in autoimmunity as time goes on post-Covid infection. In the first year following infection, if patients are “really well-managed during this period, they’ll be very less likely to suffer from this disease for their life,” he said.

The pandemic and emergence of long Covid has only made more urgent the need to understand — and find treatments for — rising rates of autoimmune disease around the world, including in the U.S. It’s estimated up to 50 million Americans live with an autoimmune condition.

Senior author Dong Keon Yon’s South Korean data came from the country’s national insurance system, which streamlines patient data so infections, vaccinations, and post-infection diagnoses are all linked. The Japanese data was provided by Seung Won Lee, one of the paper’s authors.

Only patients with AIRD recorded on two separate occasions were analyzed. The researchers also replicated the findings in patients who had undergone treatment for an autoimmune disease. This approach was meant to eliminate patients who might’ve been dealing with short-term complications of Covid, Kim said. “Steroids, immunotherapy, those are not easy to go through for patients so physicians do not really do that, put that on the table without confidence,” he said, adding that the researchers were quite confident they’d found actual AIRD cases.

The influenza control group was used to minimize referral bias — the likelihood that Covid patients were diagnosed with autoimmune diseases at higher rates just because they received more medical attention than the general, uninfected population during the pandemic.

Some outside researchers might not be convinced that the AIRDs cases reported in the paper represented true chronic disease. Amr Hakam Sawalha, chief of the division of pediatric rheumatology at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s children’s hospital, suspects that a share of the AIRDs cases reported in the study might just be short-term immune system flares. Many of the diseases included in the analysis, like rheumatoid arthritis or ankylosing spondylitis, usually take longer than a few months to reach “full blown clinical presentation,” suss out and diagnose, he said. The fact that the study found a decreased risk of AIRDs at 12 months raised his eyebrows.

Sawalha also pointed out that the diagnostic codes used by the researchers to establish the presence of autoimmune diseases couldn’t be validated. These concerns could be addressed by another study with a longer follow-up window and confirmation of the findings in other populations, he said. “All that being said, the authors are to be complimented for this study,” he added.

Kim’s research analyzed data from the original SARS-CoV-2 strain and the Delta variant. Cohen noted that it will be worth replicating the research with people who got infected with Omicron strains, and with people who were re-infected with Covid.

But the fact that the study found increased risk of autoimmune disease with the first batch of variants lends credibility to the idea that earlier, more aggressive waves are more damaging to the body, said Falko Tesch, a research associate at the Center for Evidence-Based Healthcare in Dresden, Germany who has conducted his own research on increased autoimmunity after Covid.

In order for the virus to avoid dying out, it weakens over time, killing fewer people. So later variants might be more contagious, spreading far and wide more quickly, but cause less severe illness — and potentially less severe long-term consequences, Tesch said. That’s important information to have on hand for future pandemics, because public health officials could recommend more thorough screening of infected people to catch autoimmune disease early on, he said.

Related:NIH study of ME/CFS points to immune dysfunction and brain abnormalities at core of long-dismissed disease

Even if variants grow weaker, “every year there’s a new proportion of people heading to the collective of people who are suffering from autoimmune conditions,” he said. “Every year.”

Kim, the lead author, suspects the reduced autoimmunity risk among those who’d been immunized might be because vaccination can reduce the severity of Covid. The one exception was in those patients who developed severe Covid and required hospitalization despite vaccination. That group maintained a higher risk of later autoimmune disease.

Lowering the threat of rheumatic disease, according to Abraham Edgar Gracia-Ramos, a researcher at La Raza National Medical Center in Mexico City who was not involved in the study, is “yet another reason to encourage people to get vaccinated.”

This story has been corrected to accurately reflect the source of the Japanese patient data and the criteria for identifying patients with AIRD.

About the AuthorReprints

Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows (3)

Isabella Cueto

Chronic Disease Reporter

Isabella Cueto covers the leading causes of death and disability: chronic diseases. Her focus includes autoimmune conditions and diseases of the lungs, kidneys, liver (and more). She writes about intriguing research, the promises and pitfalls of treatment, and what can be done about the burden of disease.

[emailprotected]

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Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows (2024)

FAQs

Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows? ›

Covid-19 increases risk of developing autoimmune disease, but vaccination helps, large study shows. Having Covid-19 increases a person's risk of developing an autoimmune disease in the year after infection, a large study out of South Korea and Japan reports, but vaccination helps decrease that risk.

Has there been an increase in autoimmune disease? ›

Even more alarming, autoimmunity is reaching epidemic levels, with some studies estimating an increase of 3-12% annually.

Who is at a higher risk for autoimmune diseases? ›

Risk factors include:
  • Some medications. ...
  • Having relatives with autoimmune diseases. ...
  • Smoking.
  • Already having one autoimmune disease. ...
  • Exposure to toxins.
  • Being female — 78% of people who have an autoimmune disease are women.
  • Obesity.
  • Infections.

What autoimmune disease causes long COVID? ›

Elevated levels of autoantibodies, which are believed to play a role in other autoimmune conditions, such as lupus (SLE), rheumatoid arthritis, or Sjögren's syndrome, have been noted in some patients with Long COVID. Normally, antibodies respond to foreign invaders, such as bacteria and viruses.

What is the prevalence and clinical outcomes of COVID-19 in patients with autoimmune diseases? ›

The prevalence of COVID-19 in autoimmune diseases was 0.011 (95% CI: 0.005 to 0.025) which was significantly higher than in the comparator population. Glucocorticoids increased the risk of COVID-19 and its severe outcomes.

Can COVID cause autoimmune diseases? ›

Research: Autoimmune, Autoinflammatory Disorders Rise After COVID. Oct. 10, 2023 -- After being infected with COVID-19, people have a much higher risk of getting autoimmune and autoinflammatory connective-tissue disorders like alopecia, Crohn's disease, psoriasis and vitiligo, according to new research.

What is the number one cause of autoimmune disease? ›

The exact cause of autoimmune disorders is unknown. One theory is that some microorganisms (such as bacteria or viruses) or drugs may trigger changes that confuse the immune system. This may happen more often in people who have genes that make them more prone to autoimmune disorders.

Does COVID cause long term immune damage? ›

Immune System Failure

More recent research has concluded that COVID-19 causes dysregulation to both the innate and the adaptive immune systems. Paradoxically, in COVID-19 pneumonia, the innate immune system fails to mount an effective antiviral response while also inducing potentially damaging inflammation.

Does COVID-19 have long term effects on the body? ›

People who had severe illness with COVID-19 might experience organ damage affecting the heart, kidneys, skin and brain. Inflammation and problems with the immune system can also happen. It isn't clear how long these effects might last.

What connective tissue disorder is Long COVID? ›

In COVID-19, damaged endothelial cells (ECs), increased endothelial permeability, and thrombi contribute to the connective tissue disorders. Even post-recovery, the damage to ECs and connective tissues persists, resulting in long COVID.

What medical conditions increase the risk for severe COVID-19? ›

The CDC details the factors that can increase the risk for getting severe COVID-19 . They include:
  • Age 50 Years or Older. ...
  • Cancer. ...
  • Chronic kidney disease. ...
  • Chronic liver disease. ...
  • Chronic lung diseases. ...
  • Cystic fibrosis. ...
  • Dementia. ...
  • Diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2)

How does COVID-19 impact immune compromised people? ›

People who are moderately and severely immunocompromised are more likely to become severely ill with COVID-19. They may not be protected even if they are up to date on their COVID-19 vaccines and may need to take additional precautions to stay safe.

What are the immunological predictors of disease severity in patients with COVID-19? ›

Conclusion: IL-6, the frequency of large inflammatory monocytes, and the frequency of circulating naïve CD4 T cells can be used as independent immunological predictors of poor outcomes in COVID-19 patients to prioritize critical care and resources.

Is autoimmune disease catching? ›

We do know that autoimmune diseases are not contagious, and they don't appear to be caused by any one thing in particular. Instead, scientists believe there's a multi-step process at work: Heredity: Certain genes passed down by parents make some children susceptible to an autoimmune disease.

Why do I suddenly have autoimmune disease? ›

Autoimmune diseases do tend to run in families, which means that certain genes may make some people more likely to develop a problem. Viruses, certain chemicals, and other things in the environment may trigger an autoimmune disease if you already have the genes for it.

What is the rate of autoimmune disease in the US? ›

Approximately 8% of the U.S. population is living with an autoimmune disease, and nearly 80% of those with an autoimmune disease are women.

Why are there more autoimmune diseases in the developed world? ›

Current evidence implicates the momentous alterations in our foods, xenobiotics, air pollution, infections, personal lifestyles, stress, and climate change as causes for these increases.

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