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Persistent and relapsing babesiosis in immunocompromised patients.
Authors:Peter J Krause  Benjamin E Gewurz  David Hill  Francisco M Marty  Edouard Vannier  Ivo M Foppa  Richard R Furman  Ellen Neuhaus  Gail Skowron  Shaili Gupta  Carlo McCalla  Edward L Pesanti  Mary Young  Donald Heiman  Gunther Hsue  Jeffrey A Gelfand  Gary P Wormser  John Dickason  Frank J Bia  Barry Hartman  Sam R Telford  Diane Christianson  Kenneth Dardick  Morton Coleman  Jennifer E Girotto  Andrew Spielman
Affiliation:Division of Infectious Diseases, Connecticut Children's Medical Center, and Department of Pediatrics, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, Connecticut 06106, USA. PKrause@ccmckids.org
Abstract:BACKGROUND: Human babesiosis is a tickborne malaria-like illness that generally resolves without complication after administration of atovaquone and azithromycin or clindamycin and quinine. Although patients experiencing babesiosis that is unresponsive to standard antimicrobial therapy have been described, the pathogenesis, clinical course, and optimal treatment regimen of such cases remain uncertain. METHODS: We compared the immunologic status, clinical course, and treatment of 14 case patients who experienced morbidity or death after persistence of Babesia microti infection, despite repeated courses of antibabesial treatment, with those of 46 control subjects whose infection resolved after a single course of standard therapy. This retrospective case-control study was performed in southern New England, New York, and Wisconsin. RESULTS: All case patients were immunosuppressed at the time of acute babesiosis, compared with <10% of the control subjects. Most case patients experienced B cell lymphoma and were asplenic or had received rituximab before babesial illness. The case patients were more likely than control subjects to experience complications, and 3 died. Resolution of persistent infection occurred in 11 patients after 2-10 courses of therapy, including administration of a final antimicrobial regimen for at least 2 weeks after babesia were no longer seen on blood smear. CONCLUSIONS: Immunocompromised people who are infected by B. microti are at risk of persistent relapsing illness. Such patients generally require antibabesial treatment for >or=6 weeks to achieve cure, including 2 weeks after parasites are no longer detected on blood smear.
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