Untreated Babesia Infection: When Positive Tests Go Unmanaged
Babesia infection may sometimes go untreated—even when diagnostic tests are positive. In an article by Wormser, a case is described involving a 61-year-old woman who tested positive for Babesia but did not receive treatment.
The patient lived in Westchester County, New York, an area highly endemic for tick-borne diseases. She reportedly removed an unidentified tick from her left wrist at the end of March 2020, Wormser wrote.
By June, she developed intermittent fever, joint pain, anorexia, and fatigue and sought care at the Lyme Disease Diagnostic Center (LDDC) in New York.
The patient did not have an erythema migrans rash and therefore was not treated initially for a tick-borne infection.
Positive Tests but No Treatment
On July 30, 2020, the woman tested positive for Babesia by PCR, yet treatment was not started.
Two weeks later, she had a positive Lyme disease enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and one IgM Western blot band. Despite these findings, she was not treated for Lyme disease or Babesia.
On August 26, 2020, her Lyme disease testing met the CDC’s two-tier diagnostic criteria, with both a positive EIA and positive IgM Western blot. Treatment was still withheld.
By December 11, 2020, the Babesia PCR and IgM Western blot tests were negative, although her Lyme EIA remained positive.
Why This Case Matters
Ticks carrying B. microti, the parasite responsible for babesiosis, are frequently co-infected with B. burgdorferi, the bacterium that causes Lyme disease.
However, the patient never developed more than two IgM Western blot bands for Lyme disease and never exhibited an erythema migrans rash. According to Wormser, this made diagnosing Lyme co-infection less certain.
As he explains, diagnosing Lyme disease co-infection in patients with babesiosis is more convincing when objective clinical findings—such as an erythema migrans rash—are present.
What Happened to the Patient?
The woman’s fever eventually resolved without treatment. However, the report did not clarify whether her joint pain, anorexia, or fatigue resolved.
The article also did not address whether there were any long-term consequences from leaving the infection untreated.
This uncertainty raises concerns about the potential for persistent symptoms following untreated tick-borne infections.
Editor’s Perspective
I would have been uncomfortable leaving the patient untreated, particularly given the laboratory evidence of Babesia infection.
When patients test positive and present with compatible symptoms, I believe treatment should be considered. Waiting for symptoms to resolve spontaneously despite evidence of infection raises important clinical and ethical questions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should Babesia be treated if the test is positive?
In many cases, treatment is recommended because Babesia infection can lead to persistent symptoms and potentially serious complications.
Can Babesia resolve without treatment?
Some mild cases may clear spontaneously, but long-term outcomes are not always well documented.
Why was this patient not treated?
The report suggests treatment was withheld because the patient lacked objective clinical features of Lyme disease such as an erythema migrans rash.
What are the risks of untreated Babesia?
Babesia infection can cause persistent fatigue, chronic illness, and severe complications, particularly in older adults or immunocompromised individuals.
Would you have treated this patient?
With a positive PCR test and symptoms including fever and fatigue, I would have strongly considered treatment.
References
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Wormser GP.
Documentation of a false positive Lyme disease serologic test in a patient with untreated Babesia microti infection
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Diagn Microbiol Infect Dis. 2021.
Thankfully my family doctor saw positive based on clinical observations, for Lyme and started me on antibiotics before the blood work came back proving that. It was caught and treated early, and I’ve been in remission since late 2012. Get rid of the bands, and the rash method and detect by CLINICALLY ASKING about and LISTENING TO PATIENTS symptons. Catch it sooner and treat aggressively!! I would not be alive today by the methods discussed in this article.
Unbelievable. Babesia (with Lyme, mycoplasma & toxoplasma) was responsible for my continued decline even though I received treatment for Lyme within 72 hours of exposure. It culminated in encephalitis, cognitive decline & constant fevers. Some symptoms resolved with IV antibiotics but UNTIL BABESIA WAS TREATED 2 YEARS LATER, I didn’t significantly improve. Now, 11 years later I still require oral Lyme & Babesia meds.
I have identical Lyme Carditis, I had a positive test but was never treated properly. I am left to die. 24 years of suffering and treated twice. Last time put on anibiotics I was resistant too. I had Babiesia diagnosis but I didn’t have Lyme Carditis symptoms until after improperly treated. Now I am dying. How do we get help.
I am sorry to hear you are still sick. Your story highlights how difficult it can be to be sure there is not an unresolved tick borne infection. I face this all the time in my practice. I also lean on other specialists to make sure there is not an underlying illness.
I was infected with Lyme Disease here in Asheville North Carolina a year ago. Fortunately, I had the rash behind my knee. I was treated and refused the short course of 10 days of doxycycline. I then saw an infectious disease doctor and was given a month of doxycycline. When I realized I had a nymph tick on the back of my knee I removed it and accidently dropped it on a patterned carpet. I vacuumed and remained concerned that it was in the apartment. My strictly indoor cat became ill and with great difficulty I got my vet to test him for Lyme. His test as she put it was only ‘mildly positive”. I then had difficulty getting him treated. I lived in Connecticut for years and Lyme was epidemic. I didn’t want to see him suffer from Lyme in his declining years. I don’t think people think of the fact that their dog can bring in an infected tick. The county health dept called to interview me regarding my case of Lyme. The nurse after hearing my story said “Oh yes, we had a diagnosis of Lyme and we treated the whole family and the dog.” I had Babiosis in Connecticut and was quite ill but didn’t have a diagnosis until a blood smear was taken through a Health Food Store. My question is does the Babesiosis remain in your body like Lyme?
I have patients who are failing other treatment until they add treatment for Babesia.
Why are doctors not treating this as a life threatening illness. I was just hospitalized for 5 days due to Babesia. I’ve never been so I’ll. For 3 days I was sleeping , fever, feeling paranoid, nightmares, nausea, headache, loss of balance, walking was affected, headache, loss of fine motor skills, my speech was declining like I was intoxicated. Finally went to the E.R. and had antibiotic I.V.and 5 other antibiotics. I am now having weekly blood tests and my platelets are being monitored ( total of 5 tests). If I had waited another couple days I would not be here. I thank my University of Penn professionals in Chester County, Pa.for getting me through this.
My mom has been extremely sick since 6 August. She developed the red rash on her arm the morning she went to urgent care (9 Aug) and was notified on 12 Aug that she tested positive for Lyme. The doctor, thankfully, was proactive and started her on doxycycline at the visit on the 9th. However, she continues to be very sick. After her second visit to the ER, we asked for testing for bartonella and Babesia, which both came back negative today. She has a headache (temples and eyes), extreme fatigue, body tremors, nausea, extreme loss of appetite with a weight loss of 16 pounds in the last 10 days, a chronic dry cough, shortness of breath upon exertion, gastrointestinal problems, short-term memory loss, and a CT shows she has some fluid around her heart. She sees her cardiologist tomorrow. My questions are, could she have those co-infections despite the tests being negative? Is it possibly the lyme bacteria has caused carditis which would be the reason for the cough? The doctor who tested for babesia and bartonella put her on a long and high tapered dose of prednisone (50 mg X 3 days, 40 mg X 3 days etc, down to 5 mg X 3 days) for the cough which seemed to make her get worse rather quickly. He agreed she could stop when it didn’t stop the cough after 4 days. We are at a loss and her PCM refuses to refer her anywhere for the lyme. We requested a referral to infectious disease at WVU Medical in Morgantown, WV but again, her said no. Any resources anyone can recommend so we can get mom the help she needs?
I have worked with patients who remain ill despite standard therapy for a tick borne illness. The tests for co-infections have not been as good as I would like. My patients also see other doctors to rule out other diseases including pulmonary and cardiac disease. Keep working on all fronts until she gets better.
I was exposed to mold at work for 8 years, diagnosed initially with Lyme through Igenex and clinically diagnosed with Babesia and Bartonella. Before being diagnosed with mold I had treated the lyme and co. For almost 2 years and many symptoms resolved but I had still persistent slurred speech and off balance and loss of fine motor skills that led to the testing for mold.
Although I treated with binders for over a year I didn’t have any resolution to these symptoms and then got Covid. All of my balance, slurred speech and motor skills have been exasperated and some new ones added. Could these symptoms be from babesia or from mold still although out of that exposure since I was diagnosed 12/4/20
I have had success with treating Lyme diseases and Babesia again. Others have reported success with mold treatment.