Shingles Vaccine Lowers Rates of Dementia-Related Death and Mild Cognitive Impairment


Research published earlier this year found that the shingles vaccine could help prevent dementia in older adults, reducing their odds of developing this debilitating brain disorder over the following seven years by 20 percent.

A new follow-up study, published today and presented at the Clinical Trials on Alzheimer’s Disease Conference, suggests the shingles vaccine could also help adults already diagnosed with dementia, slowing their rate of cognitive decline and prolonging their lives.

“Our analysis is particularly exciting because it shows that the vaccine doesn’t just have a preventive potential, it also appears to have a therapeutic potential because there’s a significant benefit among those who already have dementia,” says senior study author Pascal Geldsetzer, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of medicine at Stanford Medicine in Palo Alto, California.

Vaccination Cut the Risk of Dementia-Related Death Roughly in Half

For the new research, Dr. Geldsetzer and colleagues referred back to the health records of more than 280,000 older adults (ages 71 to 88) — the same group they followed for their earlier study — treated at primary care clinics in Wales.