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from Huffington Post,  August 21, 2016 by Mary Beth Pfeiffer

For at least five years, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has officially stated that 10 to 20 percent of patients treated for Lyme disease — some 30,000 to 60,000 of 300,000 infected yearly — “will have lingering symptoms of fatigue, pain, or joint and muscle aches,” even after supposedly curative antibiotic treatment.

 
But quietly, without peer review or formal announcement, the agency has decided that the actual percentage is much smaller — half or a quarter as much. The decision was made, officials told me, based on a study that showed less than 5 percent of Lyme patients exhibit ongoing symptoms after treatment.
Consequently, the CDC’s web site now states that “a small percentage” of patients will have lingering symptoms of what is called Post-treatment Lyme Disease Syndrome or PTLDS. Other studies have found higher shares of patients suffering after treatment, particularly when diagnosis is delayed. The study cited by the CDC was of patients treated early and who exhibited symptoms on average 15 years later.
The agency’s pronouncement involves the most contentious issue in the debate over Lyme disease: why — and how many — people have problems involving pain, mobility, and mental and physical functioning even after taking single-course antibiotics recommended by the Infectious Diseases Society of America, or IDSA.
In an email, a CDC press officer explained in reference to the new wording: “We changed it based on new information published in 2015 ( Weitzner, et al.) indicating a frequency of <5%, as well as a re-evaluation of the information cited by Marques, from which the 10-20% estimate was originally derived.” When pressed about other studies with different and higher findings, the spokesperson, Candice Hoffman, said the agency was “not relying on a single paper” which might suggest “false precision.” (See CDC’s complete answers below.)
Easily treated
Patient advocates say the change is consistent with a CDC pattern to reflect one side of the Lyme research community — the IDSA’s — in a way that minimizes persisting symptoms. Weitzner’s study, they note, included only patients who are quickly and easily treated; all had the Lyme rash that makes diagnosis straightforward. A recent analysis of nearly three-dozen studies found that sixfold as many treated patients as in Weitzner’s study suffered “residual symptoms.” Emerging research is also showing the Lyme bug’s ability to survive antibiotic onslaught.
Patients, researchers and physicians worldwide rely on CDC pronouncements on Lyme disease to guide them. The CDC’s since-displaced 10 to 20 percent figure for post-treatment problems has been widely quoted in both scientific papers and the popular press.
Advocates and scientists say the change was made without notice or transparency. Indeed, while the CDC did not announce the change, the agency’s Post-treatment Lyme web page does not cite the Weitzner study that the press officer referred to but continues to include a citation for 2008 Marques study, from which the previous estimate came.
The Weitzner study, published in the IDSA’s Clinical Infectious Diseases journal, reported the outcomes of 128 people treated soon after infection and tracked for up to two decades. Six, or 4.7 percent, were considered to have symptoms at their most recent visit, the study said, while 11 percent had “possible PTLDS.”
‘There is no accountability for their content. They are representing the IDSA perspective only.’ — Lorraine Johnson, executive director, LymeDisease.org
It is well-known that cases with the so-called erythema migrans rash are easiest to diagnose and, because of early treatment, have better  outcomes. On the other hand, an analysis of 34 studies, published in 2015 in the Journal of Neurology, found that 28 percent of patients suffered continuing symptoms after treatment for Lyme neuroborreliosis, a disseminated manifestation of Lyme disease involving the nervous system that can cause severe headache, eye problems and facial palsy.
The agency opted not to use a particular percentage in describing the share of people with post-treatment symptoms, CDC’s Hoffman said, because numbers vary.
“(V)arious studies have produced various estimates,” she wrote in a follow-up to my questions, “and there are serious technical caveats to interpreting each. For this reason, it was felt that providing a specific number (e.g. 10-20) suggested false precision. We are not relying on a single paper - if we were, we would just use that percentage.”
‘This is not a substantive change. The point of the paragraph is simply to make patients aware that PTLDS occurs.’ — Candice Hoffman, CDC
But other research suggests the share of patients who suffer ongoing problems is not small, experts said, and highly dependent on when treatment is given. “The way I view the literature is that the studies of early Lyme disease indicate that 5 to 12 percent of those treated early go on to develop ongoing symptoms to 6 months,” Dr. Brian Fallon, a Columbia University Lyme researcher, wrote in answer to my questions. “For patients presenting with neurologic Lyme, approximately 25 percent go on to develop chronic symptoms...(S)o, the outlook is good for patients treated at the time of the rash. The outlook is less optimistic for patients presenting with disseminated neurologic Lyme disease.” A prominent researcher from Johns Hopkins University agreed that Lyme lingers in cases of delayed care. “There’s lots of studies out there,” said Dr. John Aucott, whose study of early-treated Lyme found an 11 percent rate of ongoing problems. “That one study (CDC officials) are quoting is people who didn’t have delayed treatment.”
Indeed, the CDC’s own web site states that 70 to 80 percent of infected people get the Lyme rash, leaving some 20 to 30 percent who do not. For this group, treatment is often delayed for months or even years.
No review done
In making the web page change, CDC was failing to abide by the U.S. Information Quality Act, advocates suggested. The act is intended, a federal memo states, to ensure “the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of information (including statistical information) disseminated by Federal agencies.” Further, it applies to web posts involving “scientific information ... (with) a clear and substantial impact on important public policies or private sector decisions.” The CDC’s Peer Review Agenda web page lists about 50 reviews performed under the law on such topics as HIV, opioid prescribing and contraceptives. There is nothing listed on its management of Lyme disease, the most common vector-borne disease in America.
“There is no accountability for their content,” said Lorraine Johnson, a published Lyme disease researcher and executive director of LymeDisease.org, a prominent advocacy and research organization. “They are supposed to be disinterested and represent the public. What they are doing is they are representing the IDSA perspective only in a behind-closed-doors process.”
Read the entire article on Huffington Post.