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Systematic comparisons between Lyme disease and post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome in the U.S. with administrative claims data

Authors :
Ming Kei Chung
Mariaelena Caboni
Philip Strandwitz
Anthony D'Onofrio
Kim Lewis
Chirag J. Patel
Source :
eBioMedicine
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome (PTLDS) is used to describe Lyme disease patients who have the infection cleared by antibiotic but then experienced persisting symptoms of pain, fatigue, or cognitive impairment. Currently, little is known about the cause or epidemiology of PTLDS. METHODS: We conducted a data-driven study with a large nationwide administrative dataset, which consists of more than 98 billion billing and 1.4 billion prescription records between 2008 and 2016, to identify unique aspects of PTLDS that could have diagnostic and etiologic values. We defined PTLDS based on its symptomatology and compared the demographic, longitudinal changes of comorbidity, and antibiotic prescriptions between patients who have Lyme with absence of prolonged symptoms (APS) and PTLDS. FINDINGS: The age and temporal distributions were similar between Lyme APS and PTLDS. The PTLDS-to-Lyme APS case ratio was 3.42%. The co-occurrence of 3 out of 19 chronic conditions were significantly higher in PTLDS versus Lyme APS—odds ratio and 95% CI for anemia, hyperlipidemia, and osteoarthrosis were 1.46 (1.11–1.92), 1.39 (1.15–1.68), and 1.62 (1.23–2.12) respectively. We did not find significant differences between PTLDS and Lyme APS for the number of types of antibiotics prescribed (incidence rate ratio = 1.009, p = 0.90) and for the prescription of each of the five antibiotics (FDR adjusted p values 0.72–0.95). INTERPRETATION: PTLDS cases have more codes corresponding to anemia, hyperlipidemia, and osteoarthrosis compared to Lyme APS. Our finding of hyperlipidemia is consistent with a dysregulation of fat metabolism reported by other researchers, and further investigation should be conducted to understand the potential biological relationship between the two. FUNDING: 10.13039/100016230Steven & Alexandra Cohen Foundation, 10.13039/100014731Global Lyme Alliance, and the Pazala Foundation; National Institutes of Health R01ES032470.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
eBioMedicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0479d76e8548f6f4dcd72fbe5ee93071