You really want to detect Lyme Disease early because early treatment offers the best results
By RUTGERS UNIVERSITY
Every year in the United States, an estimated
476,000 people are diagnosed
and treated for Lyme disease. The estimate comes from the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).Ask CCA leader Cliff Vanover. He bragged about getting
bitten 50-60 times a year and contracting Lyme Disease
multiple times in an interview with Rhode Island Monthly
Lyme disease can be treated with antibiotics.
The best health outcomes are most likely when diagnosis is made within the
first weeks of infection. If left untreated, the effects of Lyme disease can
linger for years and cause neurological problems, arthritis, and a host of other ailments.
But because diagnosing Lyme can be difficult, some cases of the disease go
undetected long after initial transmission.
To help clinicians improve Lyme disease
outcomes, physician-scientists at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School and Stony
Brook University have published a guidance article in NEJM
Evidence, The New
England Journal of Medicine’s digital digest, on the
informed evaluation and treatment of Lyme in its early stages.
Lead author Steven E. Schutzer, a professor
of medicine at Rutgers Health, discussed how clinicians can approach patients
who have the possibility of an early Lyme disease infection.
Lyme disease is increasingly prevalent and yet many cases go undetected, at least in the early stages. Why is this illness sometimes difficult to diagnose?
The most common sign of Lyme disease is erythema migrans,
a bull’s-eye or target-like skin lesion that is often the hallmark sign of the
Lyme bacterial infection. But that rash doesn’t occur in all patients, nor is
it always recognized or noticed by patients when it does occur.
Currently, the only Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)-approved tests are antibody tests; it can take weeks or
longer before a patient mounts a sufficient immune response detectable by these
assays.
Another complicating issue is that once
somebody has had Lyme disease, they could be positive on the antibody tests for
years to life. This can create a quandary for doctors assessing a patient with
a suspected new case of Lyme disease.
Beyond the rash, what are some other
symptoms?
In the early stages, patients might present
with a flu-like set of symptoms, but without respiratory symptoms. These
symptoms can include fever, headache, muscle aches, joint aches, and fatigue.
Patients will likely not have a severe cough, as they would with influenza or
another respiratory virus.
Neurological symptoms can also develop,
including headaches. But many of these symptoms can be due to other illnesses.
For example, meningitis may be due to other microbes and may warrant a spinal
tap to get the right diagnosis and treatment.
Because Lyme-infected ticks can also transmit
other pathogens, such as those causing anaplasmosis and babesiosis,
patients infected with Lyme have a higher likelihood of co-infections.
What tests are currently available to
clinicians for Lyme?
The CDC and others recommend doctors use a
two-tier blood antibody (against Borrelia
burgdorferi-the cause of Lyme) testing approach. The
first-tier test, in its most optimal form, is a sensitive semi-quantitative
test. It’s akin to casting a wide net. If the test yields a borderline or
positive result, it must be followed up with a second-tier test that measures
antibodies that are more specific to Borrelia
burgdorferi. This is used as a confirmatory test.
The most common first-tier type of test is an
ELISA. For many years, the second-tier test was only a Western blot, which
provided a visual view of the results. Some of its drawbacks were that
interpretation was often subjective and the test itself took more time. A new
FDA-approved substitute is to use a second ELISA-type test.
Your paper is designed to assist primary care
clinicians in how they should approach a patient with possible early Lyme
disease. It’s based on recommendations from several leading medical societies
and federal public health agencies. Can you provide some specifics?
It’s essential that doctors don’t get tunnel
vision on Lyme. Once antibiotics are administered, they may blunt the patient’s
antibody response and disrupt what blood tests show.
Thus, doctors should assess the criteria for
positivity, and consider mitigating factors. Has the patient been in an endemic
area? Are there other skin lesions? Has a neurological exam been conducted to
rule out other treatable diseases. Clinicians should always be thinking what
else can this be, other than Lyme, and have a low threshold for coordinating
with colleagues in other specialties, like neurology and cardiology, to make
informed diagnoses and management decisions. This should be an evolving process
as new knowledge is acquired.
You also discuss the optimal timing of
testing. Can you elaborate?
During the first few weeks of a first-time
Lyme infection, the antibody response is usually negative on the conventional
two-tier tests before the body has time to mount a detectable immune response.
On the other end of the spectrum, if more than a month has passed since the
onset of infection and before treatment, it’s more common to have a positive
test. It’s during this early phase of infection that is the most problematic
for doctors.
Most commercial laboratories won’t freeze a
sample and wait for a second blood draw to test simultaneously. What doctors
can do to get around this is to draw a second blood sample and send it to the
same laboratory for the same test and then compare the results to see if there
is some evidence of moving toward positivity in the intervening days to
weeks before making a
diagnosis.
You clearly focused the article on what the
clinicians have available now, but what can we expect in the future?
This is not a static field. Researchers are
working to develop tests that are even more accurate and can be used earlier.
This includes detecting DNA of the Lyme
agent. Researchers are also looking for early molecular messages from the body
in response to an infection. Other investigators are working with the help of
clinicians on immediate point-of-care tests. Rigorous confirmation of their accuracy and reproducibility would be the intermediary
step towards providing them for routine clinical use.
What is the current outlook for most
patients?
Fortunately, the outlook is good for most
patients with early Lyme disease when an alert clinician recognizes it and
begins treatment. Most patients will return to their normal health. The goal of
our article is to foster this outcome.
Reference: 23 July 2024, NEJM
Evidence.