From the Division of STD Prevention, National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD and TB Prevention, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA.
Departments of Epidemiology.
Sex Transm Dis. 2020 Jun;47(6):369-375. doi: 10.1097/OLQ.0000000000001157.
National chlamydia case rate trends are difficult to interpret because of biases from partial screening coverage, imperfect diagnostic tests, and underreporting. We examined the extent to which these time-varying biases could influence reported annual chlamydia case rates.
Annual reported case rates among women aged 15 through 24 years from 2000 through 2017 were obtained from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's National Center for HIV/AIDS, Viral Hepatitis, STD, and TB Prevention AtlasPlus tool. Estimates of reporting completeness, diagnostic test sensitivity and specificity, and screening coverage were derived from literature review and expert opinion. We adjusted annual reported case rates for incomplete reporting, imperfect diagnostic tests, and partial screening coverage through a series of corrections, and calculated annual adjusted case rates of correctly diagnosed chlamydia.
Adjusted chlamydia case rates among young women were higher than reported case rates throughout the study period. Reported case rates increased over the study period, but adjusted rates declined from 12,900 to 7900 cases per 100,000 person-years between 2000 and 2007. After 2007, adjusted case rates declined to 7500 cases per 100,000 person-years in 2017. Bias from partial screening coverage had a larger impact on case rate magnitude and trend shape than bias from imperfect diagnostic tests or underreporting.
Reported chlamydia case rates may be substantially lower than true chlamydia case rates because of incomplete reporting, imperfect diagnostic tests, and partial screening coverage. Because the magnitude of these biases has declined over time, the differences between reported and adjusted case rates have narrowed, revealing a sharp decline in adjusted case rates even as reported case rates have risen. The decline in adjusted case rates suggests that the rise in reported case rates should not be interpreted strictly as increasing chlamydia incidence, as the observed rise can be explained by improvements in screening coverage, diagnostic tests, and reporting.
由于部分筛查覆盖、不完善的诊断检测和漏报等因素导致的偏差,国家衣原体病例率趋势难以解释。我们研究了这些随时间变化的偏差在多大程度上可能影响报告的年度衣原体病例率。
从疾病控制与预防中心国家艾滋病毒/艾滋病、病毒性肝炎、性传播疾病和结核病预防地图集工具中获取了 2000 年至 2017 年期间,年龄在 15 至 24 岁的女性的年度报告病例率。通过文献回顾和专家意见,得出报告完整性、诊断测试灵敏度和特异性以及筛查覆盖率的估计值。我们通过一系列校正来调整年度报告病例率,以纠正不完全报告、不完善的诊断检测和部分筛查覆盖的影响,并计算出正确诊断的衣原体年度调整病例率。
在整个研究期间,调整后的年轻女性衣原体病例率高于报告病例率。报告病例率在研究期间呈上升趋势,但调整后的病例率从 2000 年至 2007 年期间的 12900 例降至每 10 万人年 7900 例。2007 年后,调整后的病例率在 2017 年降至每 10 万人年 7500 例。部分筛查覆盖的偏差对病例率的幅度和趋势形状的影响大于不完善的诊断测试或漏报的偏差。
由于不完全报告、不完善的诊断检测和部分筛查覆盖,报告的衣原体病例率可能大大低于真实的衣原体病例率。由于这些偏差的幅度随时间而下降,报告病例率和调整病例率之间的差异已经缩小,即使报告病例率上升,调整病例率也出现了急剧下降。调整病例率的下降表明,报告病例率的上升不应被严格解释为衣原体发病率的上升,因为观察到的上升可以用筛查覆盖率、诊断测试和报告的改进来解释。