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Bacterial, viral, and fungal infection‐related risk of Parkinson's disease: Meta‐analysis of cohort and case–control studies
Author(s) -
Wang Hui,
Liu Xi,
Tan Changhong,
Zhou Wen,
Jiang Jin,
Peng Wuxue,
Zhou Xuan,
Mo Lijuan,
Chen Lifen
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
brain and behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.915
H-Index - 41
ISSN - 2162-3279
DOI - 10.1002/brb3.1549
Subject(s) - medicine , hepatitis c virus , meta analysis , measles , measles virus , cohort , immunology , virus , virology , vaccination
Aims Recent studies showed that patients with various bacterial, viral, and fungal infections might be at increased risk of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, the risk of PD in patients with each specific infection varied. This meta‐analysis estimated the association between various infections and PD risk. Methods Literature published from January 1965 to October 2019 in PubMed and EMBASE databases was searched. Data were extracted and pooled using random/fixed effects model. Sensitivity analysis and meta‐regression were also performed to analyze the source of heterogeneity. Publication bias was estimated by the trim and fill. Results Twenty‐three out of 6,609 studies were included. Helicobacter pylori (HP; pooled OR = 1.653, 1.426–1.915, p  < .001), hepatitis C virus (HCV; pooled OR = 1.195, 1.012–1.410, p  = .035), Malassezia (pooled OR = 1.694, 1.367–2.100, p  < .001), and pneumoniae (pooled OR = 1.595, 1.020–2.493, p  = .041) infection were associated with increased PD risk. Influenza virus, herpes virus, hepatitis B virus, scarlet fever, mumps virus, chicken pox, pertussis, German measles, and measles were not associated with PD risk. After antiviral treatment against HCV reduced the risk of PD in patients with HCV infection (OR = 0.672, 0.571–0.791, p  < .001). Significant heterogeneity exists among the included studies. Conclusion Patients with infection of HP, HCV, Malassezia, pneumoniae might be an increased risk of PD. Antiviral treatment of HCV could reduce the risk of PD.

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