Guest guest Posted March 3, 2001 Report Share Posted March 3, 2001 From Healthscout.com New Test for Lyme Disease in the Works Could reduce volume of incorrect results By Nicolle Charbonneau HealthScout Reporter Related Stories: In Hospital, Hold the Cell Phone Calls Lyme Disease Bacteria Craftier Than Thought The Tick Defense FRIDAY, March 2 (HealthScout) -- A Philadelphia researcher believes he's developed a more accurate test for Lyme disease. The test looks for evidence of a substance produced by the organism that causes the disease, rather than antibodies produced in response to the infection. This should reduce the number of incorrect test results, says Brunner, a rheumatology researcher at Children's Hospital in Philadelphia. But the validity of the new test is questionable, says another Lyme disease expert, because it has not been tested on enough people. Brunner's latest report on the method, just published, was based on results from one person. But, he says, an earlier study he co-wrote reports that the test detected Lyme disease in more than 20 people with various stages of the disease. Lyme disease is an infection caused by bacteria that's transmitted by the bite of certain types of ticks. Early signs include flu-like symptoms, headache, stiff neck, fever, muscle aches and fatigue. Usually, but not always, people also develop a bull's-eye-shaped rash. The disease can be treated with antibiotics, but if not detected and treated early enough, it can progress to more serious problems with joint, nerve or heart tissue. Current blood tests for Lyme disease are insufficient, contends Brunner. " The typical test [looks] for the antibody, " he says. " The antibody is made in the body in response to the antigen, which is the invading organism. " However, he says, these tests produce false positives by reacting to similar organisms such as syphilis or Helicobactor pylori, or they produce false negatives by failing to pick up signs of the antibody. When a rash is present, diagnosis is usually simple. Without the rash, the disease is difficult to diagnose because it has many vague symptoms. However, Brunner says, as many as 40 percent of the people who contract Lyme disease do not develop a rash. Skin biopsies, while more accurate, generally are used only as research tools, plus they're invasive and available in only a few medical centers, he says. Brunner's test takes a blood sample and splits up immune complexes that may be hiding the antigen. " What my test does is capture the immune complex, break it about and prove that the antigen or the protein from the Lyme organism is present, " Brunner says. The antigen, known as OspA (for outer surface protein A), is the same one that's present in the Lyme disease vaccine. The person described in the latest study had tested negative on all other Lyme disease tests, excluding the definitive skin biopsy test. But when Brunner used his OspA-sensitive test, he says, the person tested positive. " That's definitive proof that the patient was infected with Lyme disease, whereas the other [antibody] tests were negative, " he says. " It also tells whether you have active disease, " Brunner says. " If you've had Lyme disease and were cured, antibodies can hang around, sometimes for years. If that's the case, these antibodies would show up as positive on [the current] Lyme test. My test would tell that the person now currently has active disease because immune complexes are synonymous with an [active infection]. " A report on the new test appears in the March issue of the Journal of Immunological Methods. Brunner says his test would allow doctors to " catch [Lyme disease] early, when you can treat it, " and it would indicate whether treatment worked. " When this test becomes negative, the patient is actually cured, " he says. But Dr. Eugene Shapiro, a professor of pediatrics, epidemiology and investigative medicine at Yale University, and a Lyme disease expert in his own right, has reservations about drawing such conclusions from Brunner's study. " Clearly, before you can assess the validity of the test, you have to test it on a considerably larger number of patients with different manifestations of disease, " Shapiro says. He also questions how many people actually would need the test, saying most people develop the telltale rash. " If you have the rash, the test is superfluous because the rash by itself is diagnostic of Lyme disease, " Shapiro says. " There may be people who are not familiar with the rash, or there may be rashes that are a little atypical. Conceivably this might have some value in that setting, but only if it turned out to be 100 percent sensitive. " What To Do For information about Lyme disease, check out the Lyme Disease Foundation or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web sites, or visit this public information site funded by Pfizer, a pharmaceutical company. Or, you might want to read previous HealthScout articles on Lyme disease. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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