Clinical Edge

Summaries of Must-Read Clinical Literature, Guidelines, and FDA Actions

Autoimmune Joint Diseases Following Lyme Examined

Arthritis Rheumatol; ePub 2016 Sep 16; Arvikar, et al

Systemic autoimmune joint diseases, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), psoriatic arthritis/spondyloarthropathy (PsA/SpA), may follow Lyme disease, according to a recent study. Researchers reviewed records of all adult patients referred to a Lyme arthritis (LA) clinic over a 13-year period. For comparison, records of patients enrolled in a Lyme arthritis (LA) cohort over the most recent 2-year period were analyzed; IgG antibodies to Borrelia burgdorferi and to 3 Lyme disease-associated autoantigens were measured. They found:

  • 30 patients who developed a new-onset systemic autoimmune joint disorder a median of 4 months after Lyme disease, usually erythema migrans (EM), were identified.
  • 15 had RA, 13 had PsA, and 2 had SpA.
  • In the comparison group of 43 LA patients, monoarticular knee arthritis, without prior EM, was the usual clinical picture.
  • Most systemic autoimmune patients had positive tests for B. burgdorferi IgG antibodies by ELISA, but they had significantly lower titers and lower frequencies of Lyme-associated autoantibodies than LA patients.

Citation:

Arvikar SL, Crowley JT, Sulka KB, Steere AC. Autoimmune arthritides, rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, or peripheral spondyloarthropathy, following Lyme disease. [Published online ahead of print September 16, 2016]. Arthritis Rheumatol. doi:10.1002/art.39866.