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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, October 2008, p. 1519-1522, Vol. 15, No. 10
1071-412X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00109-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Impact of Clinical Variables on Borrelia burgdorferi-Specific Antibody Seropositivity in Acute-Phase Sera from Patients in North America with Culture-Confirmed Early Lyme Disease
Gary P. Wormser,1*
John Nowakowski,1
Robert B. Nadelman,1
Paul Visintainer,2
Andrew Levin,3 and
Maria E. Aguero-Rosenfeld4
Department of Pathology,4
Department of Medicine, Division of Infectious Diseases, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York 10595,1
Department of Biostatistics, School of Public Health, New York Medical College, Valhalla, New York 10595,2
Immunetics, Inc., Boston, Massachusetts3
Received 27 March 2008/
Returned for modification 8 May 2008/
Accepted 25 July 2008

ABSTRACT
Erythema migrans, the most common manifestation of Lyme disease,
has been associated with highly variable rates of seropositivity
for antibodies to
Borrelia burgdorferi. Differences in the sensitivities
of serologic assays for the detection of these antibodies, however,
may not be the only or even the primary explanation for this
observation. We investigated the impacts of four clinical variables
on seropositivity—the duration of erythema migrans, the
presence of single versus multiple skin lesions, and the gender
and age of the patient. In this analysis, three different serologic
tests were performed on acute-phase sera from 175 untreated
patients with culture-confirmed erythema migrans: the C6 single-peptide
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), a commercially available
ELISA in which a whole-cell sonicate of
B. burgdorferi was the
antigen, and a two-tier procedure. Irrespective of the serologic
test performed, the results showed that seropositivity rates
increased with the duration of the erythema migrans for patients
with single lesions (
P < 0.001) but not for those with multiple
skin lesions. The variability in seropositivity rates was greatest
for the two-tier testing strategy, with a >6-fold-higher
rate of seropositivity among patients with a single lesion of
22- to 30-day duration than among those whose skin lesion was
of 1- to 7-day duration (85.7 versus 14.1%;
P < 0.001). Rates
of seropositivity by each of the testing methods were also significantly
higher for patients with multiple skin lesions than for those
with single lesions (
P < 0.001). In contrast, seropositivity
rates were not affected by either the gender or the age of the
patient. Thus, in patients with erythema migrans, certain clinical
variables such as the duration and number of skin lesions had
a profound impact on seropositivity rates, irrespective of the
serologic assay performed.

INTRODUCTION
Lyme disease is the most common tick-borne infection in North
America. Local infection at the site of inoculation with
Borrelia burgdorferi by a vector tick gives rise to a characteristic
skin lesion referred to as erythema migrans. The hematogenous
dissemination of
B. burgdorferi from that site to other areas
of the skin may result in additional erythema migrans skin lesions;
the spirochete can also spread to extracutaneous sites, such
as the joints, nervous system, and heart, and cause a variety
of other clinical manifestations (
12). Among the several laboratory
methods to support a diagnosis of this infection, serologic
assays to detect antibodies to
B. burgdorferi are the most widely
used (
3). These assays employ a wide variety of antigens, including
whole-cell sonicates (WCS) of
B. burgdorferi, recombinant single
proteins, and single-peptide antigens. To improve specificity,
in 1995 the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended
a two-tier testing strategy in which a determination of seropositivity
for
B. burgdorferi antibodies requires both reactivity in a
first-tier assay, such as an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA), and a positive immunoglobulin M (IgM) or IgG immunoblot
(
6).
Although serologic testing of patients with erythema migrans is not routinely recommended in the management of the care of these patients, many studies described in published reports on the performance of serologic assays used to support a diagnosis of Lyme disease have included serum samples from patients with erythema migrans. There are several reasons for this inclusion. One is that the majority of patients with Lyme disease have this particular type of skin lesion (12). A second is that erythema migrans is the only common manifestation of Lyme disease for which the diagnosis can frequently be confirmed by the microbiologic "gold standard" of recovering B. burgdorferi by culture (3). Also, since patients with extracutaneous manifestations of Lyme disease generally test positive in serologic assays, regardless of the methodology, sera from patients with erythema migrans are regarded as being useful to compare the sensitivities of different diagnostic assays (3, 4, 8).
The reported rates of seropositivity among North American patients with erythema migrans in published studies of the performance of individual whole-cell ELISAs have varied from 33 to 86% (3). Although it is tempting to ascribe these differences to the sensitivity of the particular laboratory assay performed, limited evidence suggests that a number of other factors need to be considered before such a conclusion is justified (1, 2, 4, 10). These factors include whether the sera tested were obtained before antibiotic treatment, during the acute phase of the infection, or were acquired posttreatment, during the convalescent phase (1, 2, 4, 9, 11); how long the erythema migrans lesions were present when the acute-phase serum samples were obtained (1, 2, 4); and whether the patients had single or multiple erythema migrans skin lesions (1, 10). From many published reports, it is impossible to determine the degree of homogeneity of the serum samples studied with regard to these variables or infer the significance of these factors for the results, since the investigators do not provide sufficient data to characterize the samples in this manner.
We examined the results of a recent serologic evaluation of acute-phase sera from 175 untreated patients with culture-confirmed erythema migrans to test the hypothesis that seropositivity is directly related to certain clinical variables, regardless of the laboratory assay method employed.

MATERIALS AND METHODS
Serologic assays.
The C6 Lyme ELISA kit, a test kit approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), was used according to the instructions
of the manufacturer (Immunetics, Inc., Boston, MA). In place
of the original cutoff formula based on a Lyme disease-positive
serum sample, a simplified cutoff formula based on a negative
control and validated by the manufacturer in a separate study
was employed. The C6 peptide used as the antigen in the kit
is derived from the
B. burgdorferi B31 strain sequence, which
differs from the originally described
B. garinii IP90 sequence
by four amino acids. The kit is formatted as an indirect ELISA
in which both IgG and IgM antibodies to the C6 peptide are detected
by an enzyme conjugate. Two-tier serology was performed using
an IgG/IgM ELISA kit from Wampole Laboratories (now Inverness
Professional Diagnostics, Cranbury, NJ), followed by Lyme IgG
and IgM immunoblot kits from MarDx/Trinity Biotech (Carlsbad,
CA). The ELISA and immunoblot kits for two-tier testing were
also FDA approved for in vitro diagnostic use, and testing was
performed according to the manufacturers' directions. Both the
ELISA and immunoblot kits used a WCS preparation of
B. burgdorferi B31 as the source of antigen. A determination of positivity
by two-tier testing required a positive or indeterminate ELISA
result and a positive IgM or IgG immunoblot, interpreted according
to recommended criteria (
6).
Sera from patients with Lyme disease.
A convenience sample of serum specimens that had been stored at –80°C for 3 to 16 years was tested by both the C6 and two-tier methods as part of a performance comparison. The sera were originally obtained between June 1991 and August 2004 from patients with erythema migrans whose clinical diagnosis was confirmed by the growth of B. burgdorferi upon the culture of a skin biopsy or blood sample by previously reported methods (14). Sera were obtained prior to antibiotic treatment. The patients who provided the sera were subjects in approved research studies at New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY, who were evaluated at the Lyme disease practice of the Westchester Medical Center. Information on demographic and clinical variables was obtained from study records. The length of time that the erythema migrans lesion was present was determined based on what the patient reported to the study investigators, whereas the number of erythema migrans skin lesions was determined based on the physical examination performed by the study investigators.
Statistical methods.
Differences in the proportions of positive samples were assessed using Fisher's exact test. A test for a trend in the proportions of positive samples relative to the durations of skin lesions was conducted using exact logistic regression with conditional scores tested for P value determination. Analyses were performed with software version 10.0 from Stata (College Station, TX). A P value of <0.05 was considered to be significant.

RESULTS
The seropositivity of serum samples from 175 untreated patients
with culture-confirmed erythema migrans of

30 days duration
was evaluated. Ninety-six of the patients were male, and 79
were female; the patients' mean age ± standard deviation
was 47.5 ± 13.5 years (median, 47.1 years), with a range
of 16.1 to 76.2 years. The sera were tested by three different
methods: the C6 ELISA, in which a single peptide was the antigen;
a commercially available ELISA in which a WCS of
B. burgdorferi was the antigen (the WCS ELISA); and a two-tier testing strategy
in which sera found to be reactive by the WCS ELISA were then
retested by using separate IgM and IgG immunoblots. The impacts
of the following four clinical variables on seropositivity rates
were evaluated: the duration of the erythema migrans skin lesion,
the presence of single versus multiple erythema migrans skin
lesions, and the age and gender of the patient.
Seropositivity rates in patients with single lesions increased consistently and substantively with the increasing duration of the skin lesions, irrespective of the testing method. The rates determined for these patients were 45.3 to 100% by the C6 ELISA (P < 0.001), 53.1 to 100% by the WCS ELISA (P < 0.001), and 14.1 to 85.7% (P < 0.001) by two-tier testing (Table 1). The same relationship, however, was not found for patients with multiple erythema migrans skin lesions (Table 1).
Rates of seropositivity by each of the testing methods also
varied significantly between patients with single erythema migrans
skin lesions and those with multiple lesions (Table
2) (
P <
0.001). In patients with multiple lesions compared to those
with single erythema migrans skin lesions, the rate of C6 ELISA
seropositivity increased to 88.7% from 59.0% (
P < 0.001),
the rate of WCS ELISA seropositivity increased to 94.3% from
68.0% (
P < 0.001), and the rate of seropositivity by two-tier
testing increased to 64.2% from 26.2% (
P < 0.001). Seropositivity
was not affected by either the ages or the genders of the patients
(Tables
3 and
4).

DISCUSSION
This study demonstrates that seropositivity rates determined
with acute-phase sera from untreated patients with erythema
migrans are profoundly affected by two particular clinical features
of the patients: the presence of single versus multiple skin
lesions and, for patients with a single skin lesion, the duration
of the lesion. Wide disparities in the seropositivity rates
determined using three different serologic testing methods were
consistently observed. Variability in seropositivity rates based
on the durations of single skin lesions was greatest for the
two-tier testing method, with a >6-fold-higher rate of seropositivity
among patients whose lesion was of 22- to 30-day duration than
among those whose skin lesion was of 1- to 7-day duration. In
contrast, neither the ages nor the genders of the patients significantly
affected seropositivity rates. Although higher rates of seropositivity
among older individuals have been observed in seroprevalence
surveys of certain groups of healthy individuals (
7), there
was no a priori reason to believe that the ages of our patients
or their genders would have influenced the humoral immune response
to active infection with
B. burgdorferi.
The observations made in the present study confirm earlier observations made by us and by others with smaller numbers of serum samples (1, 2, 4, 10). The duration of infection is a well-recognized variable that affects the humoral response to infectious agents (5). The explanation for why patients with multiple erythema migrans lesions are more likely to be seropositive than those with localized infection may be the greater contact of the pathogen with the immune system and the engagement of a larger number and variety of antigen-presenting cells in patients with multiple lesions, larger antigen loads in these patients, differences in the virulence of the infecting strains of B. burgdorferi, or a combination of factors (5).
The findings in this study emphasize the importance of meticulously characterizing the serum samples that are used in studies on the performance of serologic assays for the detection of antibodies to B. burgdorferi, at least with regard to samples from patients with erythema migrans. It is also clear that the relative sensitivities of different serologic assays for patients with erythema migrans cannot be determined based on independent studies of each specific test. Furthermore, even head-to-head comparisons may be skewed by the selection of serum samples. For example, it may not be appreciated that a particular assay is actually more sensitive than another for patients with erythema migrans of short duration if the majority of serum samples studied were obtained from patients with relatively long illnesses. This issue is well-illustrated by the finding that the rates of seroreactivity based on either the C6 or the WCS ELISA results were much more similar to the results of two-tier testing for patients with a single erythema migrans lesion of 22- to 30-day duration than for those with a single lesion of 1- to 7-day duration (Table 1).
In our experience, however, untreated patients with erythema migrans of such a long duration are uncommon. Thus, the longer duration of infection is probably much more likely to confound seropositivity rates when convalescent-phase rather than acute-phase serum samples are tested, since the humoral response to B. burgdorferi typically expands for a period of up to several weeks after antibiotic therapy is initiated (1, 2). Furthermore, a variety of other variables not considered here, such as genetic differences in the strains of B. burgdorferi causing infection (13); the severity, number, or nature of systemic symptoms (1, 4); and presumably, factors related to the patient's immunologic response, are also likely to be pertinent to the development of seropositivity. Thus, the most meaningful evaluations of the sensitivities of serologic assays for patients with erythema migrans need to include an appropriate number of serum specimens that are representative of the variety of patients with single or multiple erythema migrans skin lesions seen in clinical practice. Sets of acute-phase sera from patients with a single erythema migrans skin lesion should include specimens obtained from patients who had various durations of illness at the time of presentation.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank Diane Holmgren, Susan Bittker, Denise Cooper, Carol
Carbonaro, and Lenise Banwarie for assistance.
Financial support was provided by Immunetics, Inc., to G.P.W.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: Division of Infectious Diseases, Munger Pavilion Room 245, New York Medical College, Valhalla, NY 10595. Phone: (914) 493-8865. Fax: (914) 493-7289. E-mail:
gary_wormser{at}nymc.edu 
Published ahead of print on 20 August 2008. 

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Clinical and Vaccine Immunology, October 2008, p. 1519-1522, Vol. 15, No. 10
1071-412X/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/CVI.00109-08
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.