There are more than 300,000 new cases of Lyme disease every year in the US. Lyme disease is a dangerous bacterial infection transmitted by tick bites and it becomes increasingly severe as the infection progresses. Definitive diagnosis is based on serum-based tests that have fundamental limitations: 1) current tests cannot detect early infections so patients do not receive antibiotic therapy until the infection has progressed, and 2) there is no way to measure if antibiotic therapy has been successful. MicroB-plex will address these two unmet clinical needs by introducing a novel, blood-based diagnostic method that will enable clinicians to diagnose infections earlier and to monitor the success of their interventions.
Lyme disease is the most commonly reported arthropod-borne infection in the US with recent CDC estimates eclipsing 300,000 new cases in 2013. In addition to growing in frequency, the infections have a complex and increasingly severe course. Beginning with mild flu-like symptoms and frequently a signature bull's-eye rash, erythema migrans, Lyme disease can progress to severe articular, neurological and cardiac symptoms, most of which are preventable with early antibiotic therapy. Leading investigators have identified two major shortcomings to the current serology-based methods for the definitive diagnosis of Early Localized Lyme disease. First, the clinical sensitivity in the first four weeks is poor, under 50% at the time of symptom onset, so many patients remain undiagnosed or unconfirmed until the disease has had time to progress. Second, serum antibody levels remain elevated long after the infection has been resolved making the monitoring of therapeutic success or diagnosis of re-infection virtually impossible. MicroB-plex will address these shortcomings by using a novel sample matrix from circulating antibody secreting cells (ASC) for diagnosis of Lyme disease. This novel matrix is MENSA (medium enriched for newly synthesized antibody). In this study, MicroB-plex and its clinical collaborators will test whether MENSA is effective in early Lyme diagnostic (within the first 2 weeks) and if this new approach will track therapeutic success.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Subject's blood and clinical data are collected to develop a diagnostic immunoassay
Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine
Baltimore, Maryland, United States
RECRUITINGPercentage of EM positive patients who become MicroB-plex Lyme test positive prior to seroconversion
MicroB-plex Lyme Test, that measures anti-Lyme antibodies in MENSA, becomes positive prior to conventional Lyme immunoassays that measure antibodies in serum, resulting in earlier diagnosis
Time frame: Within 14 days of enrollment
Percentage of treated EM positive patients who become MicroB-plex Lyme test negative prior to their decline in serum
MicroB-plex Lyme Test, that measures anti-Lyme antibodies in MENSA, becomes negative with successful treatment, prior to a decline in serum antibody level in conventional immunoassays, providing an earlier measure of effective therapy
Time frame: Up to one year from enrollment
Percentage of treated EM positive patients who remain MicroB-plex Lyme test positive following treatment
MicroB-plex Lyme Test, that measures anti-Lyme antibodies in MENSA, remains positive with treatment failure
Time frame: Up to one year from enrollment
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