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The cost-effectiveness of vaccinating against Lyme disease.


To the Editor: The recent article by Meltzer and colleagues (1) is an :important contribution to a pertinent public health issue: who should receive the newly licensed Lyme disease Lyme disease, a nonfatal bacterial infection that causes symptoms ranging from fever and headache to a painful swelling of the joints. The first American case of Lyme's characteristic rash was documented in 1970 and the disease was first identified in a cluster at the submarine base in Groton, Conn., by Navy doctors who reported their findings in 1976. It became more widely known and received its common name when it struck a group of families in nearby Lyme, Conn. vaccine. Answering this question is a daunting task, given the scarcity of valid data. Estimates of the spectrum and prevalence of the long-term sequelae of Lyme disease remain controversial (2-4). In generating their cost-effectiveness model, Meltzer et al. examined the cost savings involved in preventing three categories of classic organ-specific organ-specific
adj.
Of, relating to, or being a serum produced by the injection of the cells from a certain organ or tissue from one animal into another, with the result that the serum destroys the cells of the corresponding organ.
 Lyme disease sequelae (cardiovascular, neurologic, and arthritic); however, they did not take into account the potential cost savings from preventing cases of a generalized symptom complex known as post-Lyme syndrome, which includes persisting myalgia
epidemic myalgia  see under pleurodynia.


my·al·gia (m-lj
, arthralgia
ar·thralgic (-jk) adj.
, headache, fatigue, and neurocognitive deficits. These generalized sequelae, which are recognized by the National Institutes of Health as late sequelae of Lyme disease, have been found to persist for years after antibiotic therapy (5,6). Two population-based retrospective cohort studies (7,8) among Lyme disease patients whose illness was diagnosed in the mid-1980s determined that one third to half had clinically corroborated post-Lyme syndrome symptoms years after the initial onset of disease. Although these studies were conducted 15 years ago, when optimal antibiotic regimen guidelines were still evolving, the estimated cost of averting these often-disabling nonorgan-specific symptoms should also be taken into account in estimated sensitivity analyses of vaccine cost-effectiveness. The cost of treating sequelae is weighted heavily in the cost-effectiveness models presented by Meltzer and colleagues, which adds importance to considering post-Lyme syndrome. Nevertheless, we recognize the difficulty of this modeling, especially in the absence of validated cost-of-treatment data for these generalized symptoms.

A point of correction is that Meltzer et al. erroneously cite one of these studies (7) to infer that the long-term clinical sequelae of Lyme disease lasted a mean of 6.2 years from the onset of disease. In this retrospective study, Shadick et al. evaluated 38 persons with a clinical history of Lyme disease a mean of 6.2 years from the onset of disease regardless of the presence of persisting symptoms; 25 of these patients had no residual symptoms at follow-up. To accurately estimate the duration of clinical sequelae, longitudinal evaluations of representative populations of Lyme disease patients will be required because late manifestations have been demonstrated months to years after diagnosis (9,10).

References

(1.) Meltzer MI, Dennis DT, Orloski KA. The cost-effectiveness of vaccinating against Lyme disease. Emerg Infect Dis 1999;5:321-8.

(2.) Ellenbogen C. Lyme disease. Shift in the paradigm? Arch Fam Med 1997;6:191-5.

(3.) Liegner KB. Lyme disease: the sensible pursuit of answers. J Clin Microbiol 1993;31:1961-3.

(4.) Sigal LH. Persisting symptoms of Lyme disease-possible explanations and implications for treatment [editorial]. J Rheumatol 1994;21:593-5.

(5.) National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Research on chronic Lyme disease. National Institutes of Health Office of Communications Fact Sheet; May 1997.

(6.) National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Emerging infectious diseases--NIAID research. National Institutes of Health Fact Sheet; Mar 1998.

(7.) Shadick NA, Phillips CB, Logigian EL, Steere AC, Kaplan RF, Berardi VP, et al. The long-term clinical outcomes of the disease. A population-based retrospective cohort study. Ann Intern Med 1994;121:560-7.

(8.) Asch ASCH American Society of Clinical Hypnosis. ES, Bujak DI, Weiss M, Peterson MG, Weinstein A. Lyme disease: an infectious and post-infectious syndrome. J Rheumatol 1994;21:454-61.

(9.) Logigian EL, Kaplan RF, Steere AC. Chronic neurologic manifestations of Lyme disease. N Engl J Med 1990;323:1438-44. (10.) Szer IS, Taylor E, Steere AC. The long-term course of Lyme arthritis in children. N Engl J Med 1991;325:159-63.

Dimitri Prybylski University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
COPYRIGHT 1999 U.S. National Center for Infectious Diseases
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Copyright 1999, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Prybylski, Dimitri
Publication:Emerging Infectious Diseases
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Sep 1, 1999
Words:608
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