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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Epidemiology of Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome


Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ALLERGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Recipient Organization Tufts University Boston
Country United States
Start Date Sep 05, 2024
End Date Jun 30, 2029
Duration 1,759 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10862291
Grant Description

ABSTRACT: Project 1, The Epidemiology of Post-Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome A proportion of early Lyme disease patients who have been treated with standard antibiotic regimens experience persistent ill health for weeks to months, a condition known as Post Treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome or “PTLDS”. The biologic basis for persistent Lyme disease remains to be described. The

overarching goal of our Program Project proposal is to generate fundamental knowledge about recovery from Lyme disease, a growing human health problem worldwide, and better understand the mechanisms of progression to PTLDS. In this epidemiological Project 1, we shall determine PTLDS incidence through a

prospective standardized assessment of a large patient cohort at the start of treatment for early Lyme disease. We are particularly interested in the role of coinfections as potential factors in the development of PTLDS: there are 4 other zoonotic agents transmitted by deer ticks, as well as flea or mosquito-borne infections in

northeastern U.S. sites, and thus Lyme disease cases may be concurrently or sequentially exposed to these other infections. We shall re-examine pre-morbidity or concurrent clinical risk factors as a predictor for PTLDS. Finally, we shall estimate the burden of PTLDS, seeking to place its public health importance into context of

other chronic disease in the study sites. This Project leverages the acute (early) Lyme disease enrollments across a large study network of our Program Project, and complements this major effort with a serological survey based in long-term tick borne disease study sites in coastal New England communities. Results from

our questionnaires and coinfection studies, framed by the analyses of all samples by the Diagnostic Core, will help inform the findings of Project 2 (host immune dysregulation and autoantibodies), which in turn will place premorbid or other risk associations of PTLDS into context. Ultimately, the findings from the proposed

epidemiological project may contribute to modalities for preventing, treating, and reducing the public health burden of PTLDS.

All Grantees

Tufts University Boston

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