A Longitudinal Study of a Large Clinical Cohort of Patients with Lyme Disease and Tick-Borne Co-Infections Treated with Combination Antibiotics

Author:

Xi David1,Thoma Abbie1,Rajput-Ray Minha2,Madigan Anne1,Avramovic Gordana1,Garg Kunal3ORCID,Gilbert Leona3ORCID,Lambert John S.145

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine, University College Dublin, D04 V1W8 Dublin, Ireland

2. Curaidh Clinic: Innovative Solutions for Pain, Chronic Disease and Work Health, Perthshire PH2 8EH, UK

3. Te?ted Oy, 40100 Jyväskylä, Finland

4. Infectious Diseases Department, Mater Misericordiae University Hospital, D07 R2WY Dublin, Ireland

5. Infectious Diseases Department, The Rotunda Hospital, D01 P5W9 Dublin, Ireland

Abstract

The rising prevalence of tick-borne infections (TBIs) necessitates further attention. This study retrospectively investigated the types of TBIs, symptoms, and if combination antibiotics were helpful within a patient cohort at an infectious disease clinic in Ireland. In this chart audit of 301 individuals (184 female, 117 male) tested for TBIs, 140 (46.51%) had positive antibody responses for TBIs from an ELISA (enzyme-linked immunoassay) that was based on a modified two-tiered testing protocol. A total of 93 (66.43%) patients had positive antibody responses to one TBI: 83 (59.29%) for Borrelia, 7 (5.00%) for Rickettsia, and 1 (0.71%) each for either Babesia, Bartonella, or Ehrlichia. The remaining 47 (33.57%) patients were infected with multiple TBIs. These patients were treated with combination antibiotics and monitored at two subsequent follow-ups. Only 2 of 101 patients (1.98%) had discontinued treatment by the second follow-up. In the first follow-up with 118 patients, 70 (59.32%) reported pain and 48 (40.68%) had neurological symptoms. In the next follow-up of 101 patients, 41 (40.59%) had pain while 30 (29.70%) had neurological symptoms. There were statistically significant reductions in the incidence of pain (41.43%) and neurological (37.50%) symptoms between follow-ups. Thus, our study demonstrates that combination antibiotics effectively relieve TBI symptoms with good patient tolerance.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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