A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of repeated IV antibiotic therapy for Lyme encephalopathy
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Abstract
Background: Optimal treatment remains uncertain for patients with cognitive impairment that persists or returns after standard IV antibiotic therapy for Lyme disease.
Methods: Patients had well-documented Lyme disease, with at least 3 weeks of prior IV antibiotics, current positive IgG Western blot, and objective memory impairment. Healthy individuals served as controls for practice effects. Patients were randomly assigned to 10 weeks of double-masked treatment with IV ceftriaxone or IV placebo and then no antibiotic therapy. The primary outcome was neurocognitive performance at week 12—specifically, memory. Durability of benefit was evaluated at week 24. Group differences were estimated according to longitudinal mixed-effects models.
Results: After screening 3368 patients and 305 volunteers, 37 patients and 20 healthy individuals enrolled. Enrolled patients had mild to moderate cognitive impairment and marked levels of fatigue, pain, and impaired physical functioning. Across six cognitive domains, a significant treatment-by-time interaction favored the antibiotic-treated group at week 12. The improvement was generalized (not specific to domain) and moderate in magnitude, but it was not sustained to week 24. On secondary outcome, patients with more severe fatigue, pain, and impaired physical functioning who received antibiotics were improved at week 12, and this was sustained to week 24 for pain and physical functioning. Adverse events from either the study medication or the PICC line were noted among 6 of 23 (26.1%) patients given IV ceftriaxone and among 1 of 14 (7.1%) patients given IV placebo; these resolved without permanent injury.
Conclusion: IV ceftriaxone therapy results in short-term cognitive improvement for patients with posttreatment Lyme encephalopathy, but relapse in cognition occurs after the antibiotic is discontinued. Treatment strategies that result in sustained cognitive improvement are needed.
Glossary
- CDC=
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention;
- LMM=
- longitudinal mixed-effects models;
- NAART-R=
- North American Adult Reading Test-Revised;
- PCS=
- Physical Component Scale;
- ITT=
- intent-to-treat;
- VAS=
- visual analog scale;
- WMS-III=
- Wechsler Memory Scale.
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Letters: Rapid online correspondence
- A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of repeated IV antibiotic therapy for Lyme encephalopathy
- Adriana Marques, MD, NIAID/NIH, 10/11N234 10 Center Dr., Bethesda MD 20892amarques@niaid.nih.gov
- Pamela Shaw, PhD (Bethesda, MD), Christopher H. Schmid, PhD (Boston, MA) Richard F. Kaplan, PhD (Farmington, CT), Afton Hassett, PsyD (New Brunswick, NJ) Eugene Shapiro, MD (New Haven, CT) Allen Steere, MD (Boston, MA) and Gary P. Wormser MD (Valhalla, NY
Submitted June 04, 2008 - Reply from the authors
- Brian A Fallon, MD, Columbia University, 1051 Riverside Drive, Unit 69, NYC, NY 10032baf1@columbia.edu
- Eva Petkova, PhD John G Keilp, PhD, Iordan Slavov, PhD
Submitted June 04, 2008 - A randomized, placebo-controlled trial of repeated IV antibiotic therapy for Lyme encephalopathy
- Elizabeth L. Maloney, MD, none, 25611 W. Comfort Dr Wyoming, MN 55092bettymal2003@yahoo.com
Submitted May 06, 2008 - Reply from the Editorialist
- John J. Halperin, Atlantic Neuroscience Institute, Overlook Hospital, Summit NJ 07902halperin@lineuro.com
Submitted May 06, 2008 - Reply from the author
- Brian A. Fallon, Columbia University, baf1@columbia.edubaf1@columbia.edu
Submitted May 06, 2008
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