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Beatrice M. Szantyr, MD, FAAP Women in Government Annual Southern and Eastern Regional Conferences Bar Harbor, Maine September 30, 2016 ~ 30,000 surveillance cases of Lyme reported yearly in US • Doesn’t capture all diagnosed cases CDC work to estimate actual incidence • Project 1: Tests by large commercial US labs • Estimated incidence: 288,000 • Project 2: claims from large insurance database. • Estimated Incidence: 329,000 CDC estimates annual US incidence >300,000 CDC estimates in untreated patients: 5% develop persistent neurological complaints months to years after infection 60% begin to have intermittent bouts of arthritis with severe joint pain and swelling http://www.cdc.gov/lyme/signs_symptoms/index.html August 3, 2015 “Approximately 10 to 20% of patients experience fatigue, muscle aches, sleep disturbance, or difficulty thinking even after completing a recommended course of antibiotic treatment.” http://www.cdc.gov/lyme/faq/index.html March 4, 2015 • Shadick 1994: 34% had long-term sequelae • Population-based retrospective cohort study • Aucott 2015: 36% had post treatment symptoms • Prospective cohort study Quality of life survey: 3,090 patients with Lyme disease and symptoms for > 6 mos after a minimum of 21 days of abx 7.9% not diagnosed until at least 3 months after onset sx 16.6% not diagnosed for at least 6 months 61.7% not diagnosed for at least 2 years Johnson et al. (2014), PeerJ, DOI 10.7717/peerj.322 Fair or Poor Health as a Function of Duration of Illness Johnson L, et al 2014 Fair or Poor Health Lyme vs Other Chronic Illnesses Johnson L, et al 2014. Vanderhoof 1993 survey: 503 physician-dxd patients assess: medical and non-medical costs (lost income) Findings average total cost ~ $60,000 delay of diagnosis associated with higher cost cost if dx delayed >12 months 3x cost if dx <6 months Lowest cost subgroup: rash and (+) test = less time to dx Largest cost cases averaged 31 months to diagnosis and cost ~$250K Vanderhoof, IT and Vanderhoof-Forschner K Lyme disease: cost to society. Contingencies 1993 Jan/Feb: 42-48 method $ direct / pt $ indirect /other /pt Total avg/pt TOTAL estimate Vanderhoof 1993 Survey support group pts. na na $61,688 $12 million$1.3 billion/yr. Maes 1998 CDC incid. $731-$3,445 +claims + early Lyme panel+ survey $2,740$8,270 late $356-$3,152 na derm/”flu” v card/neuro Zhang 2006 Med record data + survey $2,970 $5,202 $8,172/ yr Aucott 2015 Data: claims & enrollment $2968 > cost/yr than not Lyme *if dx Lyme, $3,798 >/ yr if 1 or more PTLD rel. dx +$2,968- $712 million+3,798yr $1.3 billion/yr above no Lyme $89-$214 parent time $2.5 million/yr $2.5 billion/5yr to prevent 55,626 late sequelae $203 million/yr Complex microbiology of B. burgdorferi Slow growth characteristics (similar to TB and Leprosy) Adaptable (many different species as host) Survival strategies: multiple forms intra-and extra-cellular privileged sites immune modulation Strain variations Presence of co-infections may complicate diagnosis and treatment History: No tick; no rash • Multiple complaints: unrecognized symptom patterns or clusters • The new “great imitator” • Exam: Physical findings may be subtle or absent Lab: Poor test reliability, sensitivity, reproducibility Impact of co-infection on testing uncertain 12 No laboratory tests definitively rule in or rule out Culture not readily available: slow growth characteristics limit utility PCR specific but not sensitive Serology - antibodies Early: not useful – not measurable til 2-6 wks after infection Late: variable performance better for arthritis than for neurologic Persistent: difficult to interpret; may persist or wan Tests may be supportive Which antibiotic(s)? Failures documented for every trial regimen Individual differences among patients Combinations- very little research For how long? Duration of treatment not well-established Varies by disease stage Conflicting recommendations What about side effects and complications of treatment? What about consequences of non-treatment? • ~50% of infectious disease recommendations based on low quality evidence. Khan et al Clin Inf Dis 2010;51(10):1147-1156 • GRADE-based evaluation that evidence quality is very low. Hayes and Mead Clin Evid 2004(12)1115-24 the quality of evidence is very low. “…the evidence base for treating Lyme disease is best described as sparse, conflicting and emerging.” Cameron, Maloney, and Johnson Expert Rev Anti Infect Ther. 2014 Sep; 12(9): 1103– 1135. Institute of Medicine called for the development of treatment guidelines to assist clinicians -assemble recommendations to optimize patient care -informed by -systematic review of research evidence -assessment of benefit and harms of alternatives This information should enable healthcare providers to select the best care for a unique patient, based on best evidence and considering individual patient’s preferences. -IOM Clinical Practice Guidelines We Can Trust 2011 IOM explains this occurs most often when Evidence is weak Developers differ in their approach to evidence reviews Developers differ in their evidence synthesis Developers have varying assumptions about intervention benefits and harm Stakeholders: Patients, doctors/clinicians, insurers, employers- provider and patient public health departments, researchers, funding organizations professional boards pharmaceutical companies Clinician Pressures: Practice setting and time constraints Complicated patients Complex diagnostic possibilities Careful follow-up requirements Controversial illness Concern about lack of expertise and experience Guidelines Used as if they are laws Used as performance measures Used to determine payment Used for disciplinary purposes Evidence based medicine is the integration of high quality (best available) trial evidence, clinical expertise and patient values. When evidence is poor, clinical judgment guides decision-making. Patient –centered Review of best evidence. Clinical experience We tend to measure what is readily measurable: Is that the best assessment of quality? We tend to provide funding based on numbers: Which numbers? Case numbers? Costs? Whose costs? We regulate insurers: Do we regulate insurers? We establish rules and regulations in medicine: Do they enhance the physician-patient relationship? Do they support physician autonomy? Do they support patient autonomy and right to choose? Do no harm. Do good. Women in Government Foundation, Inc. Katie Lanzarotto Representative Deb Sanderson Fellow panelists Colleagues who influenced and edited this work Patients and their families who share their stories YOU. Hinckley A, Connolly N, Meek J, Johnson B, et al Lyme disease testing by large commercial laboratories in the United States. Clin Inf Dis. 2014; 59(5):676-681. Nelson C, Saha S, Kugler K, Delorey M, Shankar M, Hinckley A, Mead P Incidence of clinician-diagnosed Lyme disease, United States, 2005-20010. EID 2015; 21(9):1625-1631. www.cdc.gov/lyme/signs_symptoms/index.html August 3, 2015 www.cdc.gov/lyme/stats/humancases.html March 4, 2015 www.cdc.gov/lyme/faq/index.html March 4, 2015 Shadick N, Phillips C, Logigian E, Steere A, Kaplan R, Berardi V, Duray P, Larson M, Wright E, Ginsburg K, Katz J, Liang M The long-term clinical outcomes of Lyme disease: a population-based retrospective cohort study. Ann Intern Med 1994; 121: 560-567. Aucott J, Rebman A, Crowder L, Kortte K Post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome symptomotology and impact on life functioning: is there something here? Qual Life Res (2013) 22: 75-84. Johnson L, Wilcox S, Mankoff J, Stricker R (2014), Severity of chronic Lyme disease compared to other chronic conditions: a quality of life survey. PeerJ 2:e322; DOI 10.7717/peerj.322 Vanderhoof IT, Vanderhoof-Forschner K Lyme disease: cost to society. Contingencies 1993; Jan/Feb: 42-48. Maes E, Lacomte P, Ray N A cost of illness study of Lyme disease in the United States. Clin Ther 1998; 20(5):993-1008 Zhang X, Meltzer M, Pena C, Wroth L, Fix A Economic impact of Lyme disease. EID 2006; 12(4): 653-660. Adrion ER, Aucott J, Lemke KW, Weiner JP (2015) Health care costs, utilization and patterns of care following Lyme disease. PLoS ONE 10(2): e0116767.doi:10.137/journalpone.0116767. Khan A, Khan S, Zimmerman V, Baddour L, Tleyjeh I Quality and strength of evidence of the Infectious Diseases Society of America clinical practice guidelines. Clin Infect Dis 2010; 51(10): 1147-1156. Hayes E, Mead P Lyme disease Clin Evid 2004; 08: 910. Cameron D, Maloney E, Johnson L Evidence assessment and guideline recommendations in Lyme disease: the clinical management of known tick bites, erythema migrans rashes and persistent disease. Expert Rev Anti Infect Ther 2014 Sep; 12(9): 1103-1135. Graham R, Mancher M, Wolman DM et al. eds. Clinical Practice Guidelines We can trust. Washington, D.C.: National Academies Press, 2011. Scott I, Guyatt G Suggestions for improving guideline utility and trustworthiness. Evid Based Med April 2014; 19(2): 41-46.