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Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study

OBJECTIVE: To estimate long term survival, health, and educational/social functioning in patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis compared with the general population. DESIGN: Nationwide population based cohort study using national registers. SETTING: Denmark. PARTICIPANTS: All Danish residents diagnosed...

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Autores principales: Obel, Niels, Dessau, Ram B, Krogfelt, Karen A, Bodilsen, Jacob, Andersen, Nanna S, Møller, Jens K, Roed, Casper, Omland, Lars H, Christiansen, Claus B, Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend, Bangsborg, Jette M, Hansen, Klaus, Benfield, Thomas L, Rothman, Kenneth J, Sørensen, Henrik T, Andersen, Christian Ø, Lebech, Anne-Mette
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5974636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29848547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1998
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author Obel, Niels
Dessau, Ram B
Krogfelt, Karen A
Bodilsen, Jacob
Andersen, Nanna S
Møller, Jens K
Roed, Casper
Omland, Lars H
Christiansen, Claus B
Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend
Bangsborg, Jette M
Hansen, Klaus
Benfield, Thomas L
Rothman, Kenneth J
Sørensen, Henrik T
Andersen, Christian Ø
Lebech, Anne-Mette
author_facet Obel, Niels
Dessau, Ram B
Krogfelt, Karen A
Bodilsen, Jacob
Andersen, Nanna S
Møller, Jens K
Roed, Casper
Omland, Lars H
Christiansen, Claus B
Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend
Bangsborg, Jette M
Hansen, Klaus
Benfield, Thomas L
Rothman, Kenneth J
Sørensen, Henrik T
Andersen, Christian Ø
Lebech, Anne-Mette
author_sort Obel, Niels
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: To estimate long term survival, health, and educational/social functioning in patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis compared with the general population. DESIGN: Nationwide population based cohort study using national registers. SETTING: Denmark. PARTICIPANTS: All Danish residents diagnosed during 1986-2016 as having Lyme neuroborreliosis (n=2067), defined as a positive Borrelia burgdorferi intrathecal antibody test and a clinical diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis, and a comparison cohort from the general population matched on sex and date of birth (n=20 670). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mortality rate ratios, incidence rate ratios of comorbidities, and differences in educational and social outcomes. RESULTS: Mortality among patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis was not higher than in the general population (mortality rate ratio 0.90, 95% confidence interval 0.79 to 1.03). Lyme neuroborreliosis patients had increased risk of haematological (incidence rate ratio 3.07, 2.03 to 4.66) and non-melanoma skin cancers (1.49, 1.18 to 1.88). At diagnosis, Lyme neuroborreliosis patients had slightly higher employment and lower disability pension rates. After five years, patients and comparison cohort members had similar numbers of hospital contacts (difference −0.22, 95% confidence interval −0.45 to 0.02, in-hospital days/year; 0.37, −0.10 to 0.83, outpatient visits/year), employment rates (difference 1.5%, −2.1% to 5.1%), income (difference −1000, −20 000 to 18 000, Danish kroner), days of sick leave (difference −0.3, −3.5 to 3.0, per year), rates of receipt of a disability pension (difference −0.9%, −3.2% to 1.3%), and number of children (difference –0.10, −0.27 to 0.08). More patients were married (difference 4.8%, 2.2% to 7.4%) and had completed high school education (difference 7%, 1% to 12%). CONCLUSION: A verified diagnosis of Lyme neuroborreliosis had no substantial effect on long term survival, health, or educational/social functioning. Nevertheless, the diagnosis decreased labour market involvement marginally and was associated with increased risk of haematological and non-melanoma skin cancers.
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spelling pubmed-59746362018-06-01 Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study Obel, Niels Dessau, Ram B Krogfelt, Karen A Bodilsen, Jacob Andersen, Nanna S Møller, Jens K Roed, Casper Omland, Lars H Christiansen, Claus B Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend Bangsborg, Jette M Hansen, Klaus Benfield, Thomas L Rothman, Kenneth J Sørensen, Henrik T Andersen, Christian Ø Lebech, Anne-Mette BMJ Research OBJECTIVE: To estimate long term survival, health, and educational/social functioning in patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis compared with the general population. DESIGN: Nationwide population based cohort study using national registers. SETTING: Denmark. PARTICIPANTS: All Danish residents diagnosed during 1986-2016 as having Lyme neuroborreliosis (n=2067), defined as a positive Borrelia burgdorferi intrathecal antibody test and a clinical diagnosis of Lyme borreliosis, and a comparison cohort from the general population matched on sex and date of birth (n=20 670). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Mortality rate ratios, incidence rate ratios of comorbidities, and differences in educational and social outcomes. RESULTS: Mortality among patients with Lyme neuroborreliosis was not higher than in the general population (mortality rate ratio 0.90, 95% confidence interval 0.79 to 1.03). Lyme neuroborreliosis patients had increased risk of haematological (incidence rate ratio 3.07, 2.03 to 4.66) and non-melanoma skin cancers (1.49, 1.18 to 1.88). At diagnosis, Lyme neuroborreliosis patients had slightly higher employment and lower disability pension rates. After five years, patients and comparison cohort members had similar numbers of hospital contacts (difference −0.22, 95% confidence interval −0.45 to 0.02, in-hospital days/year; 0.37, −0.10 to 0.83, outpatient visits/year), employment rates (difference 1.5%, −2.1% to 5.1%), income (difference −1000, −20 000 to 18 000, Danish kroner), days of sick leave (difference −0.3, −3.5 to 3.0, per year), rates of receipt of a disability pension (difference −0.9%, −3.2% to 1.3%), and number of children (difference –0.10, −0.27 to 0.08). More patients were married (difference 4.8%, 2.2% to 7.4%) and had completed high school education (difference 7%, 1% to 12%). CONCLUSION: A verified diagnosis of Lyme neuroborreliosis had no substantial effect on long term survival, health, or educational/social functioning. Nevertheless, the diagnosis decreased labour market involvement marginally and was associated with increased risk of haematological and non-melanoma skin cancers. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2018-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5974636/ /pubmed/29848547 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1998 Text en Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://group.bmj.com/group/rights-licensing/permissions This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Obel, Niels
Dessau, Ram B
Krogfelt, Karen A
Bodilsen, Jacob
Andersen, Nanna S
Møller, Jens K
Roed, Casper
Omland, Lars H
Christiansen, Claus B
Ellermann-Eriksen, Svend
Bangsborg, Jette M
Hansen, Klaus
Benfield, Thomas L
Rothman, Kenneth J
Sørensen, Henrik T
Andersen, Christian Ø
Lebech, Anne-Mette
Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title_full Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title_fullStr Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title_short Long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with European Lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
title_sort long term survival, health, social functioning, and education in patients with european lyme neuroborreliosis: nationwide population based cohort study
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5974636/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29848547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.k1998
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