Tick-transmitted co-infections among erythema migrans patients in a general practice setting in Norway: a clinical and laboratory follow-up study

Background Erythema migrans (EM) is the most common manifestation of Lyme borreliosis. Here, we examined EM patients in Norwegian general practice to find the proportion exposed to tick-transmitted microorganisms other than Borrelia, and the impact of co-infection on the clinical manifestations and disease duration. Methods Skin biopsies from 139/188 EM patients were analyzed using PCR for Neoehrlichia mikurensis, Rickettsia spp., Anaplasma phagocytophilum and Babesia spp. Follow-up sera from 135/188 patients were analyzed for spotted fever group (SFG) Rickettsia, A. phagocytophilum and Babesia microti antibodies, and tested with PCR if positive. Day 0 sera from patients with fever (8/188) or EM duration of ≥ 21 days (69/188) were analyzed, using PCR, for A. phagocytophilum, Rickettsia spp., Babesia spp. and N. mikurensis. Day 14 sera were tested for TBEV IgG. Results We detected no microorganisms in the skin biopsies nor in the sera of patients with fever or prolonged EM duration. Serological signs of exposure against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum were detected in 11/135 and 8/135, respectively. Three patients exhibited both SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum antibodies, albeit negative PCR. No antibodies were detected against B. microti. 2/187 had TBEV antibodies without prior immunization. There was no significant increase in clinical symptoms or disease duration in patients with possible co-infection. Conclusions Co-infection with N. mikurensis, A. phagocytophilum, SFG Rickettsia, Babesia spp. and TBEV is uncommon in Norwegian EM patients. Despite detecting antibodies against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum in some patients, no clinical implications could be demonstrated.

Prior studies have demonstrated the concomitant presence of multiple microorganisms in questing ticks and transmission of more than one tick-borne microorganism has been reported in humans [8][9][10][11]. Despite this, little attention has been given to the incidence and clinical significance of co-infection with multiple tick-transmitted agents in patients with EM. Furthermore, erythematous skin lesions, similar to those seen in EM, have been associated with or attributed to N. mikurensis [12][13][14][15]. This relationship has, however, never been studied in a larger population sample and no causality has been established. Apart from N. mikurensis, skin manifestations can be observed in patients infected by other tick-borne microorganisms such as SFG rickettsiae and, less frequently, A. phagocytophilum [16][17][18]. As beta-lactam antibiotics, the first-line treatment of patients with EM, are ineffective against most tick-borne microorganisms, it is important to determine to what extent EM skin lesions are co-infected with such microorganisms. Further, it is important to determine the clinical significance of such co-infection and the possibility of skin lesions, similar to EM, being caused by tick-transmitted microorganisms other than Bbsl.
In this study, we examined EM-patients from Norway using molecular and serological methods to determine (1) the proportion exposed to tick-transmitted microorganisms other than Bbsl, and (2) the impact of co-infection on the clinical manifestations and disease duration of these patients.

Selection of study participants
The study was based on samples collected from 188 patients clinically diagnosed with EM in Norwegian general practice during the years 2012-2013. The EMpatients were originally enrolled in a clinical trial. Thus, the inclusion criteria and study patient characteristics are presented elsewhere [19]. A skin biopsy was taken from 149/188 patients at the time of inclusion (day 0). DNA from Bbsl was detected in 104/149 (69.8%) skin biopsies using real-time PCR [19]. Serum samples from all 188 patients were collected at day 0, day 14 and after 3 and 12 months. Although samples were collected as part of a previous study, all analyses and results presented in this paper are new.

Molecular analyses
Real-time PCR for tick-borne microorganisms other than Bbsl was performed on 139 of the 149 skin biopsies already analyzed for Bbsl DNA (Fig. 1a) [19]. Ten of the 149 biopsies contained an insufficient amount of material for further PCR analysis. Real-time PCR (conventional Fig. 1 a Flowchart describing molecular analyses of EM-patients. b Flowchart describing serological analyses of EM-patients. *Day 14 and 3-month sera were additionally analyzed for TBEV (187/188) and Bbsl (175/188), respectively. † Patients with detectable IgG in the screening sample also had the remaining study samples tested for antibodies against the corresponding microorganisms PCR for Babesia spp.) was also performed on the inclusion (day 0) serum samples of patients reporting fever during the initial 14 days (8/188) and patients with an EM duration of ≥ 21 days (69/188). This was done as fever is relatively uncommon in patients with EM but is often reported in infections caused by other tick-borne microorganisms. Two patients reported both fever and an EM duration ≥ 21 days.
Most of the molecular analyses were performed at Linköping University, Linköping, SE. A summary of the molecular methods is presented in Table 1a. Total nucleic acids were extracted from the patient specimens and turned into cDNA, as described elsewhere [20]. Different real-time PCR assays were used to detect N. mikurensis, Rickettsia spp., A. phagocytophilum and Babesia spp. Additional PCR analyses were performed on the inclusion (day 0) samples of patients displaying a fourfold or higher rise in antibody titers against SFG Rickettsia spp., A. phagocytophilum or Babesia microti. The molecular analyses of sera for Babesia spp. was done using conventional PCR at Statens Serum Institut, Copenhagen, DK, using the same primers and target gene as the real-time Babesia assay, as described elsewhere [21].

Real-time PCR assays Rickettsia spp.
Detection of Rickettsia spp. was done using a TaqMan real-time PCR assay, as previously described [22]. The primers CS-F and CS-R, and probe CS-P are designed to target the Rickettsia spp. citrate synthase gene (gltA) to amplify a 74-bp long amplicon ( Table 1). As a positive control, a synthetic plasmid containing the target sequence of the TaqMan real-time PCR assay was used. The plasmid contained the target sequence, spanning the nucleotides 1102-1231 of the Rickettsia rickettsii gltA gene (GenBank: U59729), synthesized and cloned into pUC57 vector (GenScript). The assay has a limit of detection of 10 copies of the plasmid per reaction.

Anaplasma phagocytophilum
Detection of A. phagocytophilum was done using a TaqMan real-time PCR assay, as previously described Table 1 Overview of the reagents and assays used for the molecular (a) and serological (b) analyses   [6]. The primers ApF and ApR, and the probe ApM are designed to target the A. phagocytophilum citrate synthase gene (gltA) to amplify a 64-bp long amplicon ( Table 1). As a positive control, a synthetic plasmid containing the target sequence of the TaqMan real-time PCR assay was used. The plasmid contained the target sequence, spanning the nucleotides 304-420 of the A. phagocytophilum gltA gene (GenBank: AF304137), synthesized and cloned into pUC57 vector (GenScript, Piscataway, NJ, USA). The assay has a limit of detection of 30 copies of the plasmid per reaction.

Neoehrlichia mikurensis
Detection of N. mikurensis was done using a TaqMan real-time PCR assay, as previously described [12]. The primers and the probe are designed to target the N. mikurensis groEL gene to amplify a 169-bp long amplicon ( Table 1). As a positive control, cDNA samples positive for N. mikurensis confirmed by sequencing in an earlier study [23] were used in each run.

Babesia spp.
Detection of Babesia spp. in the skin biopsies was done using a SYBR green real-time PCR assay, as previously described [24]. Primers BJ1 and BN2 are designed to target the Babesia 18S rRNA gene to amplify a 411-452 bp long amplicon ( Table 1). As a positive control, a synthetic plasmid containing the target sequence of the SYBR green real-time PCR assay was used. The plasmid contained the target sequence, spanning the nucleotides 467-955 of the B. divergens 18S rRNA gene (GenBank: AJ439713), synthesized and cloned into pUC57 vector (GensSript). The assay has a limit of detection of 10 copies of the plasmid per reaction.

Serological analyses
Samples were analyzed using both indirect immunofluorescence antibody (IFA) assays and ELISA assays as shown in Fig. 1b. A summary of the serological assays used is presented in Table 1b. All samples were examined using current serological "gold standards" with high reported sensitivities and specificities [25][26][27]. Of the 135 patients who were serologically analyzed for other pathogens than Bbsl, 105 (78%) had their skin biopsies undergo molecular analysis using real-time PCR (Table 1a).

IFA
135 of the 188 patients had sufficient sera for further serological analyses using indirect IFA assays (Fig. 1b). Sufficient 3-month sera were available for 126 of these patients and were screened for the presence of IgG and IgM antibodies against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum as well as IgG antibodies against B. microti. In patients missing 3-month sera, the day 14 sera (n = 8) and day 0 sera (n = 1) were screened instead (Fig. 1b). The serological analyses for SFG Rickettsia, A. phagocytophilum and B. microti were done at SSI, Copenhagen DK, using commercially available IFA assays (Focus Diagnostics, Inc., Cypress, CA, USA). All samples were analyzed as part of the same experiment, exclusively for the present study. Samples were prepared according to the manufacturer's instructions and all IFA samples underwent two-fold dilutions until end-point fluorescence, as described in a previous study [28]. Samples were read in a dark room by two independent, experienced microscopists using a fluorescence microscope to establish the titer level. In cases of disagreement between the two microscopists, the sample was discarded and prepared again. Patients with detectable IgG antibodies in the screening sample had the remaining study samples further tested for antibodies against the corresponding microorganisms. The time of inclusion was chosen as baseline and we interpreted a fourfold rise in IgG antibodies at any of the follow-up visits (day 14, 3 months, 12 months) as serological evidence of recent exposure for all IFA assays. Patients with only weak antibody reactivity as indicated by a rise in antibody level from < 1:64 to 1:64 were excluded in the analyses. Further, a high IgG titer of ≥ 1:512 (clinical cut-off at SSI) or ≥ 1:128 (one titer above manufacturers recommendation) in at least one of the samples was considered evidence of prior exposure to SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum, respectively. ELISA Day 14 and 3-month sera were tested for IgG antibodies against TBEV (187/188) and Bbsl (175/188), respectively, using ELISA.
For TBEV, the analysis was done using a commercially available IgG ELISA assay (Virion/Serion, Würzburg, Germany) at the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH), Oslo NO. We chose to analyze the day 14 samples for TBEV as the time from tick bite or EM was, at this point, expected to be sufficient for any seroconversion to have occurred. Equivocal results were retested using the same assay. Positive tests were reanalyzed with a different ELISA assay according to standard operating procedure (Euroimmun Anti-TBE Virus IgG, Lübeck, Germany).
The Bbsl analysis was performed at Sørlandet Hospital, Kristiansand NO, using a commercial ELISA kit (Enzygnost Borrelia, Lyme link VlsE/IgG), as described elsewhere [19]. At the time of inclusion, 50.0% of the patients (94/188) had detectable IgG antibodies against Bbsl [19] and to assess any further seroconversion, the 3-month sera were analyzed. For both Bbsl and TBEV, the IgG cut-off levels were set in accordance with the manufacturers' recommendations.

Clinical data
Data on concomitant symptoms was obtained through a patient diary kept for the first 14 days after inclusion [19]. The following 16 symptoms were inquired upon: tiredness, headache, arthralgia, neck stiffness, fever, palpitations, myalgia, sore throat, tender skin, dizziness, nausea, chest pain, diarrhea, chills, hot flushes, and coughing. Further, clinical data on the size, duration, diagnostic accuracy and appearance of the EM lesions were collected through clinical examination of the patients at days 0 and 14.

Statistical methods
For comparing proportions, we used a chi-squared test (Χ 2 ) or a Fisher's Exact Test when the expected number in one or more cells in the crosstabs was < 5. Means were compared with a t-test and for the continuous variables we used a Mann-Whitney U test. Missing data are considered to be randomly distributed. P-values ≤ 0.05 were considered statistically significant. Analyses were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows (v. 25; IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA).

Detection of microorganisms in biopsies and blood samples using molecular diagnostics
Neoehrlichia mikurensis, Rickettsia spp., A. phagocytophilum and Babesia spp. could not be detected in the skin biopsies (n = 139) using real-time PCR. Further, none of the above-mentioned microorganisms could be detected in the inclusion (day 0) serum samples of patients reporting fever (n = 8) or patients with an EM duration of ≥ 21 days (n = 69). For the latter, the amount of extractable samples was insufficient to perform analyses in 15.4% (29/188) of the patients. Additional real-time PCR analysis on the inclusion (day 0) samples of patients displaying at least a fourfold rise in anti-Rickettsia IgG compared to baseline revealed no detectable Rickettsia DNA.

Serological analyses
An overview of the serological results is presented in Table 2. Four patients (cases 1-4; Table 2) displayed at least a fourfold rise in anti-Rickettsia IgG compared to baseline, one of whom displayed a concomitant rise in IgM antibodies (case 1; Table 2). 7/135 patients (5.2%) exhibited high anti-Rickettsia IgG titers of ≥ 1:512 in at least one of the samples (cases 5-11; Table 2).
For A. phagocytophilum, no patients displayed a fourfold rise in IgG antibodies. However, 8/135 patients (5.9%) displayed increased levels of IgG at a titer of ≥ 1:128 in at least one of the samples (cases 12-16; Table 2). One of these patients had concomitant IgM antibodies against A. phagocytophilum (case 16; Table 2). Three patients exhibited antibody reactivity against both SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum (cases 1, 6 and 7; Table 2). No IgG antibodies could be detected against B. microti.
For TBEV, 9/187 patients (4.8%) displayed IgG antibodies on the day 14 visit. Six of these patients reported prior immunization against TBEV and one had previously been immunized against Yellow Fever, suggesting cross-reactivity. The two remaining patients had no prior history of flavivirus immunization suggesting possible prior exposure to TBEV or some other flavivirus. Only one (case 15; Table 2) of the nine patients with detectable IgG against TBEV had serological evidence of exposure to other tick-borne pathogens. The IgG antibodies were in this case vaccine-induced.

Clinical data
An overview of the clinical data for the patients displaying serological evidence of exposure to SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum is presented in Table 3. No significant difference (p > 0.05) could be observed in the size, duration and appearance of the EM skin lesions or in the presence of concomitant symptoms between these patients and those without serological evidence of exposure to other tick-transmitted organisms than Bbsl. Among those with serological evidence of exposure to other tick-transmitted organisms than Bbsl, only one patient (case 14) reported fever. No fever or clinical signs of neuroinfection could be observed in the two patients displaying non-vaccine induced TBEV IgG during the study period.

Discussion
We found (1) no molecular evidence of other tick-borne microorganisms than Bbsl being present in the skin lesions of clinically diagnosed EM patients in Norwegian general practice and (2) a generally low proportion of these patients displaying serological evidence of exposure to the studied microorganisms. Of those displaying serological evidence of exposure, only four exhibited a significant rise in IgG antibodies between the initial visit and follow-up, suggesting recent exposure.
These findings are in line with a previous Dutch study which examined 291 EM patients and detected DNA from other tick-borne microorganisms than Bbsl in the EDTA-blood of only 8 (3%) using real-time PCR [13]. Given that PCR analysis of blood has been reported to have a lower sensitivity than serological analysis for several tick-borne pathogens [25][26][27], it is possible that this was an underreporting of the true prevalence. A more recent study, combining serological and molecular methods of detection, also showed low rates of concomitant exposure to more than one tick-borne microorganism in EM patients diagnosed in the Nordic countries [11]. This latter study was, however, limited by a small study population, short follow-up and no examination of skin biopsies.
Strengths of our study include the use of both molecular and serological methods of detection, recruitment of patients with a clinical diagnosis of EM in a general practice setting, a large proportion of PCR-verified EM skin lesions ascertaining a previous tick-bite and the use of both serum samples and skin biopsies for the analyses.
Of the 105 patients who were analyzed with both PCR and serology, 70 (67%) had detectable Bbsl DNA in their skin biopsies [19], thus confirming a diagnosis of EM. 14 of the 16 patients with serological evidence of other tick-borne infections had their skin biopsies analyzed for Bbsl in the original trial [19], with detectable Bbsl DNA being found in 12 (86%) of these biopsies, again confirming a high percentage of true EM lesions among the studied patients. The use of R. ricketsii as antigen could have reduced the sensitivity of our serological assay for other species of SFG Rickettsia. However, considering the general homology among species of SFG Rickettsia, we expect it to be capable of detecting other species of SFG Rickettsia as well, as has been suggested in a previous study [29]. Further, no serological assay for the detection of N. mikurensis was available at the time of this study. However, antibodies against A. phagocytophilum have been shown to cross-react with N. mikurensis [30] and the detected antibodies against A. phagocytophilum could thus represent exposure to N. mikurensis. Moreover, serum samples, and not whole blood, were used for parts of the PCR analyses which could have reduced the clinical sensitivity for some tick-transmitted microorganisms such as the intraerythrocytic Babesia spp. Additional TBE testing in samples collected at three months might have revealed some additional seroconversions in patients with a longer than average incubation period or delayed humoral immune response. However, as the study was based on samples collected through a previous study [19], we used the patient material that was available to our disposal. This study indicates that co-infections are rare in Norwegian patients with EM. Antibodies against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum were detected in some of these patients. However, no significant difference in clinical symptoms, appearance, or duration of EM skin lesions in patients with or without antibodies against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum, was detected. However, as only four of the patients displayed a fourfold rise in titer, it is impossible to tell if most of the detected antibodies Table 3 Clinical appearance of EM patients with or without exposition to other tick-borne agents IQR interquartile range, SD standard deviation a Diagnostic accuracy scored by including GP, "not sure", "sure" or "very sure" b Number of the 16 symptoms registered: Tiredness, headache, arthralgia, neck stiffness, fever, palpitations, myalgia, sore throat, tender skin, dizziness, nausea, chest pain, diarrhea, chills, hot flushes, coughing c Colour of the EM at the day of inclusion, grade 1-5 (light red-dark red). d A = phenoxymethylpenicillin, B = Amoxicillin. C = Doxycycline. Treatments were randomized in the trial [19].  (Table 3) and it is likely that seroconversion occurred during this time frame for some of the patients. As infections with N. mikurensis have primarily been reported in chronically ill immunosuppressed patients [31][32][33], it is also important to emphasize that the participants of our study reported baseline general health at a comparable level to the background population and that active treatment with immunosuppressants was an exclusion criteria for the original trial [19]. EM is a clinical diagnosis and in the Nordic countries the recommended treatment for EM without fever or other signs of disseminated disease is phenoxymethylpenicillin [34,35]. Our study does not support a change in practice regarding this first-line treatment. Of note, 44% of the participants displaying serological evidence of exposure to Rickettsia or Anaplasma received treatment with phenoxymethylpenicillin or amoxicillin (Table 3), antibiotics with no effect on obligate intracellular organisms.

Conclusions
Our study indicates that co-infections with N. mikurensis, A. phagocytophilum, SFG Rickettsia, Babesia spp. and TBEV are uncommon in Norwegian patients with EM. Despite detecting antibodies against SFG Rickettsia and A. phagocytophilum in some of these patients, no clinical implications could be demonstrated, and the clinical significance of these findings remains unknown.