Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.

Syndromic management is an inexpensive and effective method for the treatment of symptomatic sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but its effectiveness as a method of STI control in at-risk populations is questionable. We sought to determine the potential utility of syndromic management as a publ...

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Main Authors: Jesse L Clark, Andres G Lescano, Kelika A Konda, Segundo R Leon, Franca R Jones, Jeffrey D Klausner, Thomas J Coates, Carlos F Caceres, NIMH International Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2009-09-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2745701?pdf=render
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author Jesse L Clark
Andres G Lescano
Kelika A Konda
Segundo R Leon
Franca R Jones
Jeffrey D Klausner
Thomas J Coates
Carlos F Caceres
NIMH International Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial
author_facet Jesse L Clark
Andres G Lescano
Kelika A Konda
Segundo R Leon
Franca R Jones
Jeffrey D Klausner
Thomas J Coates
Carlos F Caceres
NIMH International Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial
author_sort Jesse L Clark
collection DOAJ
description Syndromic management is an inexpensive and effective method for the treatment of symptomatic sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but its effectiveness as a method of STI control in at-risk populations is questionable. We sought to determine the potential utility of syndromic management as a public health strategy to control STI transmission in high-risk populations in urban Peru.We surveyed 3,285 at-risk men and women from three Peruvian cities from 2003-05. Participants were asked about the presence of genital ulcers, discharge, or dysuria in the preceding six months. Participants reporting symptoms were asked about subsequent health-seeking and partner notification behavior. Urine and vaginal swab samples were tested for Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis by nucleic acid testing. Serum was tested for syphilis and Herpes Simplex Virus-Type 2 antibodies.Recent urogenital discharge or dysuria was reported by 42.1% of participants with gonorrhea or chlamydia versus 28.3% of participants without infection. Genital ulceration was reported by 6.2% of participants with, and 7.4% of participants without, recent syphilis. Many participants reporting symptoms continued sexual activity while symptomatic, and approximately half of all symptomatic participants sought treatment. The positive and negative predictive values of urogenital discharge or genital ulcer disease in detecting STIs that are common in the study population were 14.4% and 81.5% for chlamydia in women and 8.3% and 89.5% for syphilis among gay-identified men.In our study, STIs among high-risk men and women in urban Peru were frequently asymptomatic and symptomatic participants often remained sexually active without seeking treatment. Additional research is needed to assess the costs and benefits of targeted, laboratory-based STI screening as part of a comprehensive STI control program in developing countries.
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spelling doaj.art-30d1b40d618848ae8d2e8b8918b8b4c32022-12-21T19:26:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032009-09-0149e720110.1371/journal.pone.0007201Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.Jesse L ClarkAndres G LescanoKelika A KondaSegundo R LeonFranca R JonesJeffrey D KlausnerThomas J CoatesCarlos F CaceresNIMH International Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention TrialSyndromic management is an inexpensive and effective method for the treatment of symptomatic sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but its effectiveness as a method of STI control in at-risk populations is questionable. We sought to determine the potential utility of syndromic management as a public health strategy to control STI transmission in high-risk populations in urban Peru.We surveyed 3,285 at-risk men and women from three Peruvian cities from 2003-05. Participants were asked about the presence of genital ulcers, discharge, or dysuria in the preceding six months. Participants reporting symptoms were asked about subsequent health-seeking and partner notification behavior. Urine and vaginal swab samples were tested for Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis by nucleic acid testing. Serum was tested for syphilis and Herpes Simplex Virus-Type 2 antibodies.Recent urogenital discharge or dysuria was reported by 42.1% of participants with gonorrhea or chlamydia versus 28.3% of participants without infection. Genital ulceration was reported by 6.2% of participants with, and 7.4% of participants without, recent syphilis. Many participants reporting symptoms continued sexual activity while symptomatic, and approximately half of all symptomatic participants sought treatment. The positive and negative predictive values of urogenital discharge or genital ulcer disease in detecting STIs that are common in the study population were 14.4% and 81.5% for chlamydia in women and 8.3% and 89.5% for syphilis among gay-identified men.In our study, STIs among high-risk men and women in urban Peru were frequently asymptomatic and symptomatic participants often remained sexually active without seeking treatment. Additional research is needed to assess the costs and benefits of targeted, laboratory-based STI screening as part of a comprehensive STI control program in developing countries.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2745701?pdf=render
spellingShingle Jesse L Clark
Andres G Lescano
Kelika A Konda
Segundo R Leon
Franca R Jones
Jeffrey D Klausner
Thomas J Coates
Carlos F Caceres
NIMH International Collaborative HIV/STD Prevention Trial
Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
PLoS ONE
title Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
title_full Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
title_fullStr Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
title_full_unstemmed Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
title_short Syndromic management and STI control in urban Peru.
title_sort syndromic management and sti control in urban peru
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2745701?pdf=render
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