Dukers-Muijrers Nicole H T M, Wolffs Petra F G, De Vries Henry, Götz Hannelore M, Heijman Titia, Bruisten Sylvia, Eppings Lisanne, Hogewoning Arjan, Steenbakkers Mieke, Lucchesi Mayk, Schim van der Loeff Maarten F, Hoebe Christian J P A
Department of Sexual Health, Infectious Diseases, and Environmental Health, Heerlen, South Limburg Public Health Service, The Netherlands.
Department of Medical Microbiology, Care and Public Health Research Institute, Maastricht University Medical Center, The Netherlands.
Clin Infect Dis. 2019 Nov 13;69(11):1946-1954. doi: 10.1093/cid/ciz050.
Rectal infections with Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) are prevalent in women visiting a sexually transmitted infection outpatient clinic, but it remains unclear what the most effective treatment is. We assessed the effectiveness of doxycycline and azithromycin for the treatment of rectal and vaginal chlamydia in women.
This study is part of a prospective multicenter cohort study (FemCure). Treatment consisted of doxycycline (100 mg twice daily for 7 days) in rectal CT-positive women, and of azithromycin (1 g single dose) in vaginally positive women who were rectally untested or rectally negative. Participants self-collected rectal and vaginal samples at enrollment (treatment time-point) and during 4 weeks of follow-up. The endpoint was microbiological cure by a negative nucleic acid amplification test at 4 weeks. Differences between cure proportions and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated.
We analyzed 416 patients, of whom 319 had both rectal and vaginal chlamydia at enrollment, 22 had rectal chlamydia only, and 75 had vaginal chlamydia only. In 341 rectal infections, microbiological cure in azithromycin-treated women was 78.5% (95% CI, 72.6%-83.7%; n = 164/209) and 95.5% (95% CI, 91.0%-98.2%; n = 126/132) in doxycycline-treated women (difference, 17.0% [95% CI, 9.6%-24.7%]; P < .001). In 394 vaginal infections, cure was 93.5% (95% CI, 90.1%-96.1%; n = 246/263) in azithromycin-treated women and 95.4% (95% CI, 90.9%-98.2%; n = 125/131) in doxycycline-treated women (difference, 1.9% [95% CI, -3.6% to 6.7%]; P = .504).
The effectiveness of doxycycline is high and exceeds that of azithromycin for the treatment of rectal CT infections in women.
NCT02694497.
沙眼衣原体(CT)直肠感染在性传播感染门诊就诊的女性中很常见,但最有效的治疗方法仍不明确。我们评估了多西环素和阿奇霉素治疗女性直肠和阴道衣原体感染的有效性。
本研究是一项前瞻性多中心队列研究(FemCure)的一部分。治疗方案为,直肠CT阳性的女性服用多西环素(100毫克,每日两次,共7天),阴道阳性但直肠未检测或直肠阴性的女性服用阿奇霉素(1克单剂量)。参与者在入组时(治疗时间点)以及随访的4周内自行采集直肠和阴道样本。终点指标为随访4周时核酸扩增检测呈阴性的微生物学治愈情况。计算治愈比例和95%置信区间(CI)之间的差异。
我们分析了416例患者,其中319例在入组时直肠和阴道均有衣原体感染,22例仅有直肠衣原体感染,75例仅有阴道衣原体感染。在341例直肠感染中,阿奇霉素治疗组女性的微生物学治愈率为78.5%(95%CI,72.6%-83.7%;n = 164/209),多西环素治疗组为95.5%(95%CI,91.0%-98.2%;n = 126/132)(差异为17.0%[95%CI,9.6%-24.7%];P <.001)。在394例阴道感染中,阿奇霉素治疗组女性的治愈率为93.5%(95%CI,90.1%-96.1%;n = 246/263),多西环素治疗组为95.4%(95%CI,90.9%-98.2%;n = 125/131)(差异为1.9%[95%CI,-3.6%至6.7%];P =.504)。
多西环素治疗女性直肠CT感染的有效性高,且超过阿奇霉素。
NCT02694497。