LYMEPOLICYWONK: Two Standards of Care Revisited: Should Lyme Patients Have A Choice?
Lyme disease is a controversial illness—as anyone with the disease knows. The controversy arises because there is medical uncertainty about the best way to diagnose and treat the disease, poor quality diagnostic tests, and very little treatment research. Out of this uncertainty, two approaches to treating the disease have emerged: one advanced by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and the other advanced by the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS). But both of the approaches are not equal in the eyes of patients. One leaves patients without treatment options when short term therapy fails, as it does all too often. The other provides patients with the option of receiving additional care.
Over 10 years ago, I wrote a piece called Two Standards of Care that explained the different approaches to treating Lyme disease, why the controversy exists, and what patients want. A lot has changed. Today, I am releasing a revised version of Two Standards of Care.
Because there are two standards of care in Lyme disease, patients should be advised of the benefits and risks associated with both treatment approaches and engage in shared medical decision making with their physicians that recognizes the importance of patient values and preferences in decisions that impact quality of life.
This is what is done in other diseases where there is medical uncertainty. For example, breast cancer and prostate cancer patients have tough choices to make. No one knows whether it is better to do watchful waiting, surgery, or hormone therapy for prostate cancer. But we do know that the patient is the one who has to live with the decision and that the medical decision made may significantly affect the course of their life. The ethical principle of autonomy requires that patient values and preference be part of the decision-making process.
I have included the text of Two Standards of Care below. You can also download a hard copy that includes footnotes and prints out much more nicely if you expect to hand this on to your doctor, your congressional representative, your governor or—well, you get the point.
The LYME POLICY WONK blog is written by Lorraine Johnson, JD, MBA, who is the Chief Executive Officer of LymeDisease.org, formerly CALDA. Contact her at lbjohnson@lymedisease.org. Follow her on Twitter @lymepolicywonk.
Two Standards of Care in Lyme Disease
By Lorraine Johnson, JD, MBA
Medically recognized standards of care are treatments that have been accepted by medical experts as appropriate treatments for a disease or condition and are commonly used by healthcare professionals. The medical recognition of standards of care is typically represented by publication in a peer-reviewed journal or some form of recognition by a professional medical society. (1) Multiple standards of care exist for over 25 medical conditions that have posted guidelines on the National Guidelines Clearinghouse. (2)
In Lyme disease, opinion within the medical community is deeply divided regarding the best approach for treating Lyme disease, particularly when patients remain ill after short-term protocols.(1, 2) This split has resulted in two standards of care: one advanced by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and the other advanced by the International Lyme and Associated Diseases Society (ILADS). Both viewpoints are reflected in peer-reviewed, evidence-based guidelines and constitute medically recognized standards of care.
Guidelines reflect both the evidence base and value judgments of the guidelines panel. Factors associated with divergent guidelines include a weak evidence base, clinical experience, patient preferences, treatment availability, and clinician values.(3) The main difference between the guidelines of the IDSA and those of ILADS is that in the face of scientific uncertainty, the ILADS guidelines defer to clinical judgment and patient preferences while those of the IDSA make very strong recommendations against treatment and severely restrict the use of clinical judgment.
A recent study funded by the Centers for Diseases Control and Prevention (CDC) surveyed a representative sample of people in the US population and found that only 39% of those with Lyme disease were treated in accordance with blanket short term recommendations in the IDSA guidelines. The majority were treated for longer periods.(4)
In 2013, the CDC dramatically revised its estimate of the annual incidence of Lyme disease from roughly 30,000 cases per year to over 300,000 cases, a ten-fold increase.(5) To put this in perspective, the annual incidence of Lyme disease is now 1.5 times more than the estimated number of cases of breast cancer and six times higher than the annual incidence of HIV/AIDS. However, federal funding of Lyme disease has been meager. For example, while Lyme disease occurs six times more often annually than HIV/AIDS, it receives less than 1% of the funding allotted to HIV/AIDS by the National Institutes of Health. (6)
Inaccurate diagnostic tests–based on technology that is over 20 years old— create medical uncertainty in both the diagnosis and treatment of Lyme disease. The primary tests used in Lyme disease are antibody tests that detect past exposure to infection rather than active infection. Unlike tests for HIV/AIDS, which have a sensitivity and specificity of over 99%, Lyme disease tests are highly insensitive and miss more than half of cases. (7)
Further uncertainty results from the high rate of treatment failure for all stages of Lyme disease. According to the CDC, as many as 20% of patients remain ill after the short term treatment protocol recommended by the IDSA.(8) Other studies suggest the treatment failure rate for early Lyme disease may be as high as 36%.(9) In late Lyme disease, treatment failure rates may exceed 50%.(10) When patients remain ill after treatment, antibody tests cannot tell us whether the bacteria persist or whether treatment is effective. However, persistence has been demonstrated in both animal and human studies after treatment with antibiotics when more invasive testing such as tissue and organ biopsies are performed. (18,19-21)
Only three NIH-funded trials have been conducted on the treatment of chronic Lyme disease. (11-14) Sample sizes were extremely small, ranging from 37 to 78 patients. Critics have pointed out that studies this small lack sufficient statistical power to measure clinically relevant improvement.2,3 Nevertheless, two of the three studies demonstrated that retreatment improved some patients’ measures, such as fatigue and pain. In addition, a number of observational trials have demonstrated that most patients improve with continued treatment.(7, 15-18)
Chronic Lyme disease may be long lasting, may significantly impair patient quality of life, and may be costly to patients, employers, healthcare systems, and society. In a survey of more than 5000 patients with chronic Lyme, half report that they have been ill for more than 10 years. These patients suffer a worse quality of life than those with most other chronic illnesses, including congestive heart failure, diabetes, multiple sclerosis and arthritis. (19)
Over 43% report that they had to stop working and 25% report that they have been on disability at some point in their illness.(19) They are five times more likely to visit healthcare providers and twice as likely to be seen in emergency rooms compared to the general population. (19) The cost of this increased healthcare utilization continues until patients are restored to health.
To increase the quality and trustworthiness of guidelines, the Institute of Medicine recommends that guideline developers use a rigorous evidence assessment scheme called GRADE, include patient representatives in the guideline development process, and update the guidelines regularly. (2)
Although the IDSA has recently adopted the GRADE assessment protocol, its Lyme guidelines were developed in 2006, before the protocol applied. The IDSA has not updated its Lyme guidelines since that time. The IDSA has denied patient requests to participate in its guideline process for the past 10 years. In contrast, the ILADS guidelines were revised in 2014, reflect current science, included patients in the development process, and used the GRADE evidence assessment tool.
In the face of scientific uncertainty, clinical decisions should be based on the best currently available evidence. Today’s patients cannot wait for tomorrow’s research. The IDSA guidelines deny treatment options to seriously ill patients. This results in unnecessary suffering for patients and is inhumane and unjust.
We agree with the AMA, ACP and other professional medical organizations that informed shared medical decision making enhances the exercise of the patient’s right of self-determination—a cornerstone of medical ethics.(3, 20) Shared decision making is a collaborative process by which patients and their providers make healthcare decisions together, taking into account the best scientific evidence available, clinical judgment, and the patient’s values, preferences, and circumstances.(21)
In light of the fact that two standards of care exist for Lyme disease, we believe that:
- Physicians, insurers, patients and governmental agencies should be educated that two treatment approaches exist;
- Physicians should a) provide patients with information regarding the risks and benefits of all available treatment options, and b) engage in shared decision making, taking into account patient preferences and values and the importance of autonomy in matters involving health related quality of life and functional capacity;
- Insurance reimbursement should be provided for treatment rendered in accordance with either standard of care; and
- Government agencies should provide unbiased information regarding both standards of care and treatment approaches.
Is there a petition to sign to make it up to the patient about how they want to be treated?
I think that’s a great idea. Let the patient choose by signing an official form/document.
it farther: that the failure to advise patients of the two standards of care violates INFORMED CONSENT. State law on informed consent is either governed by statute (so, the standard might be found by looking in state statutes, typically available at a public library); or is defined by case law (case law being more difficult to find since one would have to get the most recent definitive case, typically by searching a law database like Westlaw or Lexis, that is too expensive for most people to access), and then determining if that case law is still good law by “Shepherdizing” the case, meaning you use yet another search engine to make sure the case has not been overturned by another case you might have missed.
Regardless, “informed consent” is the law of the land, and unless a physician provides “informed consent” to a patient, which includes discussing all options, and their risks and benefits, they are committing medical malpractice.
So, this is where I would go with the discussion. It is not just that there are “two standards” of care; it is that patients must be informed by the doctor, and permitted an informed choice.
Also, I avoid using the word “controversial” in discussing Lyme disease — it just plays into the rhetoric used by the other side. It injects a sensationalism and has a negative connotation that drives people away. Most people don’t want to be associated with anything “controversial.” I prefer to use the word “uncertainty” where appropriate. That there are aspects of the disease that are “uncertain” due to the limits of present technology. I believe that it is a less emotion-laden term for the same phenomenon.
Where the other side tries to inject emotion and sensationalism, I would try to remove that, and instead seek to express the same concepts in less emotional terms.
Firstly, I applaud Lorraine Johnson for this excellent piece. To succinctly describe this incredibly complicated problem and put forth an intelligent and rational approach is a tremendous and most valuable accomplishment.
Dr. Shepler’s suggestions are
worthy of consideration and inclusion. The legal tact of the law of “informed consent” is brilliant! Indeed, it is a tool patients can use in their dealings with the medical establishment now. I will definitely take this tact in my next dealing with an ill-informed medical practitioner.
I am long term TBD patient and thus can easily reflect on what past implementation of these guidelines would have meant to my life. The proposed guidelines are unarguable; the health and well-being of the population requires this non-political and medically responsible approach. To quote: “Today’s patients cannot wait for tomorrow’s research”. Bravo Lorraine Johnson!!
YES I THINK PEOPLE SHOULD BE TREATED LIKE ANY OTHER DEASESES.
The ten fold jump in incidence by the CDC is part of a premarketing strategy for the announcement of a Lyme vaccine. T
There is also “dark” research occurring in Lyme as in other diseases. Across the country, ticks are quietly being taken into custody and interrogated. Knowledge is power is money. ID doctors will eventually flip and be born again. Hallelujah!!
The official medical research community denounces the anecdotal nature of Lyme disease’s emergence. Cumulative anecdotalism is in fact the intuitive path to wisdom.
First info I gave doctor years ago was probably tossed. Look of disbelief in doctor’s eyes. Is there anything “medical professional looking” I can pass on?
Know of any insurance companies that cover lyme disease treatment?
Twelve years after Lyme diagnosis, I would give anything for a treatment choice. I did well, gained muscle, felt great on antibiotic treatment for four years, but treatment stopped, I relapsed and lost my job in six months. Conventional doctors could not bring themselves to say I was sick, but my boss had no problem sending me home because I was “sick.” Managers commented, “You need your doctors to support you.” Everybody else could see what so many doctors could not see. I have not had any support for over five years. I might have recovered fully had I known the oral/dental connection to Lyme. Instead I had 27 teeth pulled trying to get rid of the oral infection that made it almost impossible to eat.
Wow. I hear ya. I lost some family members to chronic Lyme. Some physicians wont even admit Lyme exists. Yet you can see it under a microscope?! Sort of like every other illness only one or two hundred years ago were thought to be ‘demonic possessions’ or witchcraft, etc. Speak out! This is madness! 27 teeth and twelve years…you have totally earned the right to tell your story. 🙂 Thank you for telling your story.
It cant bring my loved ones back, but perhaps it could save a life somewhere. Im all for that.
Rick Simpson Oil. I hear it may help w/chronic Lyme symptoms and at least acts like a cure. Pass it on.
The way conventional medicine and the CDC willfully neglect the existence of Chronic Lyme Disease and the severity of its co-infections goes against everything the medical profession is supposed to stand for! In helping my son get a diagnosis and proper treatment for over 5 years has shown us how poorly medicine has responded to this growing crisis. Here are links to 2 features that were done on my son’s battle with the disease. We are doing our best to help get the word out about the severity and complexities of Chronic Lyme. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=37xEb-lspNU
http://philadelphia.cbslocal.com/2014/07/07/health/
Yes one of the most amazing lessons of lyme isnt just the depth of complexity of the disease itself, but that diseases and their diagnostics are defined before one ever walks in the dr door. Nor according to sciece but according to what fits a fifteen min office visit and what is permitted to be published in medical journals and what insurance codes are deleted when treatment is too exp. And o f course what pharma can sell. Uber alles.
I hope your son is finding some improvement you are all soo amazingly committed.
Bonjour,
Cet article m’intéresse beaucoup. Où puis-je trouver la traduction en français. Google refuse la traduction malheureusement. Merci
Françoise
Thank you for standing firm on the ILADS treatment. Yes, patients deserve to make the choice about their health care.
Unfortunately, ILADS is the best treatment the medical world can offer, and if you can’t afford it for long enough, you are not likely to get better.
While it is the most effective treatment at the present time using the antibiotics on the market, it is a sin and a crime that there is not a diagnostic test nor treatment as effective as that which HIV/AIDS patients receive.
I find Carl Tuttle’s description in his “Phase 2 of the Initiative” to be enlightening: “We have been dealing with an ANTIBIOTIC-RESISTANT SUPERBUG purposely concealed to promote vaccine development. Post-treatment Lyme disease syndrome is simply a fabricated medical condition disguising treatment failure.”
Thank you for a wonderful article, which clearly presents the current state of lyme diagnosis and treatment today! Patients should definitely be allowed a choice of treatment.
I have lyme myself. After years of antibiotic treatment and hyperbaric oxygen treatment, which I paid for myself, I have probably gotten about 95% of my life back. The problem I am seeing on the West Coast, is that physicians here hardly ever consider lyme as a diagnosis. I see many friends and their relatives who present in much the same way my case did. I think many of these patients actually may have lyme disease. Most aren’t even tested for lyme. Most end up with a diagnosis of fibromyalgia. We know that fibromyalgia is a non-diagnosis in the sense that the cause is unknown and the current treatment treats only the symptoms instead of the cause.
My own son and daughter-in-law, are dermatologists. Both believe that fibromyalgia is a more important diagnosis than lyme. West Coast doctors need to be educated that lyme disease does exist in the western U.S. and that it is a serious disease. Since 30-40% of lyme cases have a rash, my son and daughter-in-law do see patients with early lyme. They follow the IDSA Guidelines and only treat for two weeks. There must be some way to educate West Coast doctors about the seriousness of lyme, the inadequacies of current testing and the two opposing methods of treatment. I cringe when I think of the patients here who only get two weeks of treatment, if they are treated at all. Many of them will go on to develop chronic lyme. Since chronic lyme takes such a huge toll on all aspects of a patients life, early diagnosis is important. I live at the top of the mountains in Santa Barbara. My neighbor developed a classic lyme Bull’s Eye. He saw his doctor and came home with a cortisone cream and was told to come back in a month if the rash didn’t go away. Fortunately my husband is also a physician and treated him for lyme. Education seems to be the key to save many from the horror of having to live with chronic lyme.
Donna L.Williams CLS A.S.C.P.
Santa Barbara, CA