Thursday, August 6, 2009 - 11:10 AM

COS 88-10: Managing multiple pathogens: A case study of Lyme disease and anaplasmosis

Felicia Keesing1, Michael Tibbetts1, Jesse Brunner2, Mary Killilea3, Kathleen LoGiudice4, Laura Cheney1, Shannon T. Duerr5, Kenneth A. Schmidt6, and Richard S. Ostfeld7. (1) Bard College, (2) SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, (3) New York University, (4) Union College, (5) Cary Institue of Ecosystem Studies, (6) Texas Tech University, (7) Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies

Background/Question/Methods

Human granulocytic anaplasmosis (HGA) is an emerging tick-borne disease in North America, Europe, and Asia. Patients with HGA suffer flu-like symptoms that can be acute, and approximately 1-4% of patients die, though many less severe cases probably go unreported. HGA is caused by infection with a rickettsial bacterium, Anaplasma phagocytophilum (Ap), that is passed from host to host by ixodid ticks. In North America, Ap is carried by the same ticks that transmit the bacterium that causes Lyme disease (LD), and ticks are frequently co-infected with both pathogens. These ticks feed on a wide variety of hosts and, as with LD, hosts vary in the probability that they will transmit Ap to feeding ticks.

Results/Conclusions

We are determining the probability with which particular host species transmit Ap to feeding ticks. Hosts were captured in the field and brought into the lab, where feeding ticks finished their blood meals, dropped off, and were collected. Ticks were then assayed for infection using PCR. Hosts vary in reservoir competence for Ap, but not as much as they vary for the Lyme bacterium. We have combined this information with extensive data on tick burdens on hosts to produce a model of how host community composition influences risk for both LD and HGA. Understanding the differences between HGA and LD will allow the development of appropriate management to reduce overall disease transmission to humans.