The 2018 Infectious Disease Committee of the American Academy of Pediatrics stated that up to 3 weeks or less of doxycycline is safe in children of all ages. Our goal was to examine trends in doxycycline treatment for children with Lyme disease.
We assembled a prospective cohort of children aged 1 to 21 years with Lyme disease who presented to one of eight participating Pedi Lyme Net centers between 2015 and 2023. We defined a Lyme disease case with an erythema migrans (EM) lesion or positive two-tier Lyme disease serology categorized by stage: early-localized (single EM lesion), early-disseminated (multiple EM lesions, cranial neuropathy, meningitis, and carditis), and late (arthritis). We compared doxycycline treatment by age and disease stage and used logistic regression to examine treatment trends.
Of the 1,154 children with Lyme disease, 94 (8.1%) had early-localized, 449 (38.9%) had early-disseminated, and 611 (53.0%) had late disease. Doxycycline treatment was more common for older children (83.3% ≥ 8 years vs. 47.1% < 8 years;
Young children with Lyme disease are frequently treated with doxycycline. Prospective studies are needed to confirm the safety and efficacy of doxycycline in children younger than 8 years, especially for those receiving courses longer than 3 weeks.