Therapeutic benefits of the shingles vaccine against dementia?

Therapeutic benefits of the shingles vaccine against dementia?
Credit: GettyImages @ Peter Dazelay - Frank Bienewald

A new study published in the scientific journal Cell by the research group of Stanford University professor Dr. Pascal Geldsetzer shows that the shingles vaccine may have therapeutic properties against dementia. The finding suggests that two doses of the shingles vaccine could not only slow the progression of dementia, but also reduce the risk of death from these cognitive disorders. According to Dr. Geldsetzer, these observations suggest that the shingles vaccine is not only preventive against dementia, but also has therapeutic potential: “It was really exciting and unexpected!”

Close-up view of a pharmacist's hand holding a pre-filled syringe of flu vaccine before injection in a pharmacy in Pau, France, on December 8, 2025. The image highlights the hands and the needle, with a reference to the flu vaccine. It illustrates the problem of the virulent seasonal flu epidemic and the potential shortage of the medication or the vaccination campaign against the winter virus. Close-up view of a pharmacist's hand holding a pre-filled syringe of flu vaccine before injection in a pharmacy in Pau, France, on December 8, 2025. The image features the hands and needle, with a reference to the flu vaccine. It illustrates the problem of the virulent seasonal flu epidemic and the potential shortage of the drug or the vaccination campaign against the winter virus. (Photo by Quentin Top / Hans Lucas / AFP via Getty Images)

Shingles is a disease resulting from infection with a virus called Varicella-Zoster, which causes a painful rash. The risk of shingles and related serious complications increases significantly with age, due to the weakening of the immune system. For this reason, shingles vaccination is recommended from the age of 50 onwards, and is said to be over 90% effective in preventing shingles in the elderly. But how could this vaccine also influence dementia? The study published in Cell did not precisely determine why, but several avenues are suggested to answer this question. According to Geldsetzer, the virus that causes shingles remains present in the nervous system, even when dormant. This could lead to inflammation, which is a key factor in many chronic diseases, including dementia. Another possibility is the stimulation of the nervous system directly linked to vaccination: a stronger immune system fights infections better, which may be linked to an increased risk of dementia.

Elderly woman, 89 years old with adult coloring book to reduce anxiety and improve brain function, Dover, Delaware. (Photo by: Matthew Lovette/Jumping Rocks/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

This study led to early work by the same research team, showing that the vaccine could prevent or delay dementia. These initial developments were found by analyzing medical records of older adults in Wales, where a shingles vaccination program had been launched for septuagenarians in September 2013. In this program, an age limit below 80 was imposed: it was this rule that enabled the researchers to compare two very similar groups of elderly people, but with very different chances of being vaccinated. Their first finding showed that receiving the vaccine reduced the probability of being diagnosed with a new dementia by 3.5% over a seven-year period. In the more recent finding, the researchers re-used Welsh data from over 282,500 adults, compared with data from Australia, to analyze differences in the diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment, and the rate of cognitive impairment-related death for those diagnosed with dementia. The results show that the vaccine reduces the risk of being diagnosed with mild cognitive impairment by 3.1% over 9 years, with a greater protective effect in females. For those already diagnosed with dementia, the vaccine reduced the risk of death from dementia by 29.5% over the following 9 years, suggesting a slowing in the progression of cognitive impairment.

BRISTOL, UNITED KINGDOM – MARCH 10: (EDITORS NOTE; This image contains graphic content) A real human brain is displayed as part of an exhibition at the @Bristol attraction on March 10, 2011 in Bristol, England. The Real Brain exhibit – which comes with full consent from an anonymous donor and needed full consent from the Human Tissue Authority – is suspended in a large tank engraved with a full scale skeleton on one side and a diagram of the central nervous system on the other and is a key feature of the All About Us exhibition. (Photo by Matt Cardy/Getty Images)

Further research would lead to a randomized clinical trial to improve understanding of the link between shingles vaccine and dementia. The scientific community, however, cautions the public that, while this study does indeed demonstrate protection of the patient's cognitive abilities, the exact reason for this remains unknown. Several professors state that these studies are not intended to establish a recommendation for vaccination to reduce the risk of dementia. Further research is essential, not least because the current study involves older versions of the shingles vaccine.