Updated
Updated · WBAY · Jul 5
Pfizer Says Lyme Vaccine Prevented 70% of Cases as U.S. Tick-Bite ER Visits Hit 2017 High
Updated
Updated · WBAY · Jul 5

Pfizer Says Lyme Vaccine Prevented 70% of Cases as U.S. Tick-Bite ER Visits Hit 2017 High

3 articles · Updated · WBAY · Jul 5

Summary

  • Pfizer said in March its late-stage Lyme disease vaccine trial showed 70% protection, offering a potential new tool as the 2026 tick season intensifies.
  • CDC data showed April emergency-room visits for tick bites reached their highest level since 2017, while public health experts estimate nearly 500,000 Americans get Lyme disease each year.
  • About 90% of U.S. Lyme cases are reported in the Northeast, mid-Atlantic and Upper Midwest, and incidence has nearly doubled since 1995 as warmer weather expands tick activity.
  • Untreated infections can turn serious—about 60% of untreated patients may develop arthritis, with rarer heart and nervous-system complications that can linger even after antibiotics.

Insights

As ticks spread into new regions, will the new vaccine be enough to prevent a wider public health crisis?
Why does Lyme disease leave some patients with debilitating symptoms for years, even after successful antibiotic treatment?
If early blood tests for Lyme can be wrong, how can people be sure they are getting the right diagnosis?