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589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series

BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend antibody testing to detect acute borreliosis. Detectable antibody response takes about 2-3 weeks limiting its usefulness in early infection. The ChromaCode High-Definition PCR (HDPCR)™ Tick-Borne Pathogen Panel (TBP) is a research use only qualitative, real-t...

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Autores principales: Mutti, Jasmine, Moore, Franklin, Paez, Armando
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10678618/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.658
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author Mutti, Jasmine
Moore, Franklin
Paez, Armando
author_facet Mutti, Jasmine
Moore, Franklin
Paez, Armando
author_sort Mutti, Jasmine
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend antibody testing to detect acute borreliosis. Detectable antibody response takes about 2-3 weeks limiting its usefulness in early infection. The ChromaCode High-Definition PCR (HDPCR)™ Tick-Borne Pathogen Panel (TBP) is a research use only qualitative, real-time PCR assay for detection and identification of tick-borne pathogens including Borrelia spp. from whole blood samples. METHODS: HDPCR™ TBP was put in clinical use after this was validated in the laboratory to identify Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Babesia microti, Ehrlichia spp, Borrelia spp. (B. burgdoferi B. mayonii, and B. miyamotoi). Chart review was performed on all (+)Borrelia spp. from 8/1/22 to 12/31/22. Descriptive analysis was performed on each case. All data was captured and stored using RedCap. RESULTS: Over a period of 5 months, 9 (0.5%) out of 1667 tested were (+) for B. burgdorferi; one (0.06%) was (+) for B. miyamotoi; out of these 6 cases had clinical information for review as described in Table 1. Mean age was 64 years; 4 were white and 2 were Hispanic. All 6 lived in western Massachusetts, and only 1 had a known history of tick bite. All had reported systemic symptoms at the time of testing. 3 had (+) B. burgdorferi IgM antibodies;1 case tested (+) PCR for B. miyamotoi but serology was not performed. 1 case was (+) for B. burgdorferi PCR 28 days after symptom onset and had babesiosis co-infection; 1 with B. burgdorferi mono-infection had a (+) PCR test on day 14 of symptoms. All 6 had symptom improvement after doxycycline treatment for 10-14 days. Case description [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: HDPCR™ TBP for Borrelia spp is a low yield test, even in an endemic region. All (+) cases were symptomatic and clinically improved following doxycycline treatment supporting the test’s validity. Two cases had negative IgM antibody testing and diagnosis would be likely missed without PCR testing. None were immunocompromised including 2 with prolonged PCR positivity with 1 case having babesiosis co-infection. Study was limited only to 6 cases excluding analysis of other tick-borne infections as part of syndromic testing. Clinical usefulness and timing of HDPCR™ TBP to diagnose borreliosis and other tickborne illnesses need further study. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures
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spelling pubmed-106786182023-11-27 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series Mutti, Jasmine Moore, Franklin Paez, Armando Open Forum Infect Dis Abstract BACKGROUND: Current guidelines recommend antibody testing to detect acute borreliosis. Detectable antibody response takes about 2-3 weeks limiting its usefulness in early infection. The ChromaCode High-Definition PCR (HDPCR)™ Tick-Borne Pathogen Panel (TBP) is a research use only qualitative, real-time PCR assay for detection and identification of tick-borne pathogens including Borrelia spp. from whole blood samples. METHODS: HDPCR™ TBP was put in clinical use after this was validated in the laboratory to identify Anaplasma phagocytophilum, Babesia microti, Ehrlichia spp, Borrelia spp. (B. burgdoferi B. mayonii, and B. miyamotoi). Chart review was performed on all (+)Borrelia spp. from 8/1/22 to 12/31/22. Descriptive analysis was performed on each case. All data was captured and stored using RedCap. RESULTS: Over a period of 5 months, 9 (0.5%) out of 1667 tested were (+) for B. burgdorferi; one (0.06%) was (+) for B. miyamotoi; out of these 6 cases had clinical information for review as described in Table 1. Mean age was 64 years; 4 were white and 2 were Hispanic. All 6 lived in western Massachusetts, and only 1 had a known history of tick bite. All had reported systemic symptoms at the time of testing. 3 had (+) B. burgdorferi IgM antibodies;1 case tested (+) PCR for B. miyamotoi but serology was not performed. 1 case was (+) for B. burgdorferi PCR 28 days after symptom onset and had babesiosis co-infection; 1 with B. burgdorferi mono-infection had a (+) PCR test on day 14 of symptoms. All 6 had symptom improvement after doxycycline treatment for 10-14 days. Case description [Figure: see text] CONCLUSION: HDPCR™ TBP for Borrelia spp is a low yield test, even in an endemic region. All (+) cases were symptomatic and clinically improved following doxycycline treatment supporting the test’s validity. Two cases had negative IgM antibody testing and diagnosis would be likely missed without PCR testing. None were immunocompromised including 2 with prolonged PCR positivity with 1 case having babesiosis co-infection. Study was limited only to 6 cases excluding analysis of other tick-borne infections as part of syndromic testing. Clinical usefulness and timing of HDPCR™ TBP to diagnose borreliosis and other tickborne illnesses need further study. DISCLOSURES: All Authors: No reported disclosures Oxford University Press 2023-11-27 /pmc/articles/PMC10678618/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.658 Text en © The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Infectious Diseases Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstract
Mutti, Jasmine
Moore, Franklin
Paez, Armando
589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title_full 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title_fullStr 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title_full_unstemmed 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title_short 589. Clinical Utility and Patient Characteristics Associated with Positive Whole Blood PCR for Borrelia spp. in an Endemic Area Using Novel High-Definition PCR(TM) assay: A Case Series
title_sort 589. clinical utility and patient characteristics associated with positive whole blood pcr for borrelia spp. in an endemic area using novel high-definition pcr(tm) assay: a case series
topic Abstract
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10678618/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ofid/ofad500.658
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