| Literature DB >> 31635153 |
Maša Velušček1, Rok Blagus2, Tjaša Cerar Kišek3, Eva Ružić-Sabljić4, Tatjana Avšič-Županc5, Fajko F Bajrović6,7, Daša Stupica8,9.
Abstract
In this retrospective cohort study of patients with tick-borne encephalitis (TBE), the clinical outcome in relation to co-infection with B. burgdorferi sensu lato (s.l.) and, specifically, the effect of antibiotic treatment on clinical outcome in patients with TBE who were seropositive for borreliae but who did not fulfil clinical or microbiologic criteria for proven co-infection, were assessed at a single university medical center in Slovenia, a country where TBE and Lyme borreliosis are endemic with high incidence. Among 684 patients enrolled during a seven-year period from 2007 through 2013, 382 (55.8%) had TBE alone, 62 (9.1%) had proven co-infection with borreliae and 240 (35.1%) had possible co-infection. The severity of acute illness was similar in all the groups. The odds for incomplete recovery decreased during a 12-month follow-up but were higher in women, older patients, and in those with more severe acute illness. Incomplete recovery was not associated with either proven (odds ratio (OR) 1.21, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.49-2.95; p = 0.670) or possible co-infection (OR 0.95, 95% CI 0.55-1.65; p = 0.853). Among patients with possible co-infection, older patients were more likely to be prescribed antibiotics, but the odds for incomplete recovery were similar in those who received antibiotics and those who did not (OR 0.82, 95% CI 0.36-1.87; p = 0.630), suggesting that routine antibiotic treatment in patients with TBE and possible co-infection may not be warranted.Entities:
Keywords: Lyme borreliosis; antibiotic therapy; co-infection; tick-borne encephalitis
Year: 2019 PMID: 31635153 PMCID: PMC6832614 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8101740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Reports on patients with tick-borne encephalitis and co-infection with Borrelia burgdorferi sensu lato a.
| Study Period Country | Number of Patients and Patients’ Characteristics | Proven Borrelial Co-Infection | Proven Borrelial CNS Co-Infection b | Possible Borrelial Co-Infection c | Proven and Possible Borrelial Co-Infection |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1992–1993 Slovenia [ | 89 patients with TBE | 12 (13.5) | 6 (6.7) | / | / |
| 1994 Slovenia [ | 492 patients with TBE | 82 (16.7) | 61/489 (12.5) | 60/484 (12.4) d | / |
| 1995–1996 Slovenia [ | 36 patients with TBE out of 130 patients with acute febrile illness after a tick bite | 6 (16.7) | / | 3 (8.3) d | 9 (25) |
| 1999–2001 Russia [ | 445 patients with TBE out of 1952 patients with acute febrile illness after a tick bite | / | / | 33 (7.4) e | / |
| 1995–2004 Slovenia [ | 32 patients with TBE | / | 6 (18.8) f | 15 (46.9) g | / |
| 1993–2008 Poland [ | 687 patients with TBE | / | 13 (1.9) | 116 (16.9) h | / |
| 2003–2009 Slovenia [ | 11 patients with peripheral facial palsy out of 1218 patients with TBE | / | 1 (9.1) | 2 (18.2) d | 3 (27.3) |
| 2009–2012 Poland [ | 110 patients with TBE | / | / | 30 (27) i | / |
| 2007–2012 Slovenia [ | 717 patients with TBE | / | 22/661 (3.3) | 66/655 (10.1) g | / |
Data are n (%) or n/n (%). Abbreviations: CNS, central nervous system; TBE, tick-borne encephalitis; /, data not available. a PubMed literature search using the queries “tick-borne encephalitis AND Lyme” and “tick-borne encephalitis AND Borrelia” with no limits for year of publication and written in English. Case reports were not included. b Defining criteria for Lyme neuroborreliosis: isolation of B. burgdorferi s.l. from cerebrospinal fluid or intrathecal synthesis of IgG or IgM antibodies specific for B. burgdorferi s.l. c Defined by positive serologic test results. d Immunofluorescence assay detecting serum IgM and IgG antibodies. Titers of 1:256 were interpreted as positive. e enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) detecting serum IgM antibodies and immunofluorescence assay with corpuscular antigen Ip-21 strain B. afzelii for detection of serum IgG antibodies. f Chemiluminescence immunoassay (Liaison, Diasorin, Italy) or enzyme immunoassay (IDEIA, DakoCytomation, Denmark). g Chemiluminescence immunoassay (Liaison, Diasorin, Italy) detecting serum IgG. h ELISA (Abbot, USA and Biomedica, Austria until 2006, subsequently Virotech, Germany). i Borrelial co-infection evaluated using whole blood PCR for Borrelia species.
Figure 1Study diagram.
Demographic, clinical, and laboratory characteristics of patients with tick-borne encephalitis on admission according to absence or presence of proven or possible borrelial co-infection.
| Characteristic | TBE | TBE-LB | TBE-Bb | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 49 (35–61) | 53 (43–68) | 59 (46–69) | <0.001 |
| Male sex | 208 (54.5) | 39 (62.9) | 148 (61.7) | 0.143 |
| Charlson comorbidity index | 1 (0–2) | 1 (0–2) | 2 (0–3) | <0.001 |
| Vaccinated against TBE | 14 (3.7) | 2 (3.2) | 12 (5.0) | 0.670 |
| Clinical presentation | 0.615 | |||
| Meningitis | 91 (23.8) | 16 (25.8) | 50 (20.8) | |
| Meningoencephalitis | 259 (67.8) | 38 (61.3) | 169 (70.4) | |
| Meningoencephalomyelitis | 32 (8.4) | 8 (12.9) | 21 (8.8) | |
| Severity of acute illness | 0.649 | |||
| Mild | 99 (25.9) | 16 (25.8) | 54 (22.5) | |
| Moderate | 232 (60.7) | 38 (61.3) | 145 (60.4) | |
| Severe | 51 (13.4) | 8 (12.9) | 41 (17.1) | |
| Severity score of acute illness | 12 (8–17) | 12 (6.8–17.8) | 12.5 (9–19) | 0.324 |
| CSF leukocyte count (× 106/L) | 104 (54.8–192) | 101 (65.3–154) | 68.5 (35–134.3) | <0.001 |
Data are median (interquartile range) or number (%) of patients. Abbreviations: TBE, tick-borne encephalitis without borrelial co-infection; TBE-LB, TBE with proven borrelial co-infection; TBE-Bb, TBE with possible borrelial co-infection; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid. a Overall p value for comparisons between groups was estimated using Kruskal–Wallis test or Chi-squared test with continuity correction as appropriate: p < 0.05 was considered significant.
Factors associated with incomplete recovery in patients with tick-borne encephalitis and possible borrelial co-infection according to antibiotic therapy (yes versus no).
| OR (95% CI) a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 0.05 (0.00–0.51) | 0.011 |
| Antibiotic therapy (yes vs. no) | 1.23 (0.53–2.81) | 0.630 |
| Time | ||
| 6 vs. 2 months | 0.24 (0.13–0.44) | <0.001 |
| 12 vs. 6 months | 0.50 (0.25–0.98) | 0.043 |
| Sex (male vs. female) | 0.47 (0.20–1.08) | 0.075 |
| Age, years | 1.05 (1.00–1.10) | 0.058 |
| Charlson comorbidity index | 0.53 (0.32–0.87) | 0.012 |
| Severity score of acute illness | 1.07 (1.02–1.13) | 0.007 |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio for incomplete response; CI, confidence interval. a Estimated from a multiple logistic regression model with incomplete recovery as the dependent variable, adjusted for patient effect. Each OR is adjusted for all other variables in the table. b p < 0.05 was considered significant.
Number (%) of patients with tick-borne encephalitis who had incomplete recovery at follow-up visits according to absence or presence of proven or possible borrelial co-infection.
| All | TBE | TBE-LB | TBE-Bb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 months post-hospitalization | 363/652 (55.7) | 202/361 (56.0) | 32/59 (54.2) | 129/232 (55.6) | 0.9698 |
| 6 months post-hospitalization | 170/462 (36.8) | 82/220 (37.3) | 16/50 (32.0) | 72/192 (37.5) | 0.757 |
| 12 months post-hospitalization | 95/294 (32.3) | 44/136 (32.4) | 10/30 (33.3) | 41/128 (32.0) | 0.991 |
| At final evaluable visit | 219/653 (33.5) | 129/361 (35.7) | 15/59 (25.4) | 75/233 (32.2%) | 0.257 |
Abbreviations: TBE, tick-borne encephalitis; TBE-LB, proven co-infection with B. burgdorferi s.l.; TBE-Bb, possible co-infection with B. burgdorferi s.l. Overall p value for comparisons between groups was estimated using the normal approximation with continuity correction: p < 0.05 was considered significant.
Factors associated with incomplete recovery according to absence or presence of proven or possible borrelial co-infection (proven co-infection vs no co-infection and possible co-infection versus no co-infection).
| OR (95% CI) a | ||
|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 0.05 (0.01–0.22) | <0.001 |
| TBE-LB vs. TBE | 0.82 (0.34–2.00) | 0.670 |
| TBE-Bb vs. TBE | 1.05 (0.61–1.83) | 0.853 |
| Time | ||
| 6 vs. 2 months | 0.21 (0.14–0.31) | <0.001 |
| 12 vs. 6 months | 0.48 (0.30–0.76) | 0.002 |
| Sex (male vs. female) | 0.51 (0.31–0.86) | 0.011 |
| Age, years | 1.04 (1.01–1.07) | 0.012 |
| Charlson comorbidity index | 0.57 (0.41–0.80) | <0.001 |
| Severity score of acute illness | 1.09 (1.06–1.13) | <0.001 |
Abbreviations: OR, odds ratio for incomplete response; CI, confidence interval; TBE, tick-borne encephalitis; TBE-LB, TBE with proven borrelial co-infection; TBE-Bb, TBE with possible borrelial co-infection; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid. a Estimated from a multiple logistic regression model with unfavorable outcome as the dependent variable, adjusted for patient effect. Each OR is adjusted for all other variables in the table. b p < 0.05 was considered significant.