Kaiser Permanente Evidence-based Practice Center, Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente, Portland, Oregon.
JAMA. 2020 Aug 18;324(7):682-699. doi: 10.1001/jama.2020.10371.
Increasing rates of preventable sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in the US pose substantial burdens to health and well-being.
To update evidence for the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) on effectiveness of behavioral counseling interventions for preventing STIs.
Studies from the previous USPSTF review (2014); literature published January 2013 through May 31, 2019, in MEDLINE, PubMed (for publisher-supplied records only), PsycINFO, and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials. Ongoing surveillance through May 22, 2020.
Good- and fair-quality randomized and nonrandomized controlled intervention studies of behavioral counseling interventions for adolescents and adults conducted in primary care settings were included. Studies with active comparators only or limited to individuals requiring specialist care for STI risk-related comorbidities were excluded.
Dual risk of bias assessment, with inconsistent ratings adjudicated by a third team member. Study data were abstracted into prespecified forms. Pooled odds ratios (ORs) were estimated using the DerSimonian and Laird method or the restricted maximum likelihood method with Knapp-Hartung adjustment.
Differences in STI diagnoses, self-reported condom use, and self-reported unprotected sex at 3 months or more after baseline.
The review included 37 randomized trials and 2 nonrandomized controlled intervention studies (N = 65 888; 13 good-quality, 26 fair-quality) recruited from primary care settings in the US. Study populations were composed predominantly of heterosexual adolescents and young adults (12 to 25 years), females, and racial and ethnic minorities at increased risk for STIs. Nineteen trials (n = 52 072) reported STI diagnoses as outcomes (3 to 17 months' follow-up); intervention was associated with reduced STI incidence (OR, 0.66 [95% CI, 0.54-0.81; I2 = 74%]). Absolute differences in STI acquisition between groups varied widely depending on baseline population STI risk and intervention effectiveness, ranging from 19% fewer to 4% more people acquiring STI. Thirty-four trials (n = 21 417) reported behavioral change outcomes. Interventions were associated with self-reported behavioral change (eg, increased condom use) that reduce STI risk (OR, 1.31 [95% CI, 1.10-1.56; I2 = 40%, n = 5253). There was limited evidence on persistence of intervention effects beyond 1 year. No harms were identified in 7 studies (n = 3458) reporting adverse outcomes.
Behavioral counseling interventions for individuals seeking primary health care were associated with reduced incidence of STIs. Group or individual counseling sessions lasting more than 2 hours were associated with larger reductions in STI incidence, and interventions of shorter duration also were associated with STI prevention, although evidence was limited on whether the STI reductions associated with these interventions persisted beyond 1 year.
美国可预防性性传播感染(STIs)发病率不断上升,对健康和幸福感造成了巨大负担。
更新美国预防服务工作组(USPSTF)关于预防 STIs 的行为咨询干预措施的有效性的证据。
上一次 USPSTF 审查(2014 年)的研究;2013 年 1 月至 2019 年 5 月 31 日在 MEDLINE、PubMed(仅为出版商提供的记录)、PsycINFO 和 Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库发表的文献。截至 2020 年 5 月 22 日的持续监测。
包括在初级保健环境中针对青少年和成年人进行的行为咨询干预措施的高质量和良好质量的随机和非随机对照干预研究。仅包括有活性对照或仅限于因 STI 风险相关合并症需要专科护理的个体的研究被排除在外。
采用双重风险偏倚评估方法,不一致的评估结果由第三组人员裁决。将研究数据抽象到预定的表格中。使用 DerSimonian 和 Laird 方法或受限最大似然法(带有 Knapp-Hartung 调整)估计合并的优势比(OR)。
3 个月或更长时间后基线时 STI 诊断、自我报告的避孕套使用和自我报告的无保护性行为的差异。
综述包括 37 项随机试验和 2 项非随机对照干预研究(N=65888;13 项高质量,26 项中等质量),均来自美国初级保健机构。研究人群主要由异性恋青少年和年轻人(12 至 25 岁)、女性以及感染性传播感染风险增加的种族和少数民族组成。19 项试验(n=52072)报告了 STI 诊断结果(3 至 17 个月的随访);干预与降低 STI 发病率相关(OR,0.66 [95%CI,0.54-0.81;I2=74%])。两组之间 STI 发生率的绝对差异差异很大,具体取决于基线人群 STI 风险和干预效果,从 19%的人减少到 4%的人获得 STI。34 项试验(n=21417)报告了行为改变结果。干预措施与自我报告的行为改变(例如,增加避孕套使用)相关,这些改变降低了 STI 风险(OR,1.31 [95%CI,1.10-1.56;I2=40%,n=5253)。关于干预效果是否能持续 1 年以上,证据有限。在报告不良后果的 7 项研究(n=3458)中,未发现任何危害。
针对寻求初级卫生保健的个体的行为咨询干预措施与 STIs 发病率降低有关。持续时间超过 2 小时的小组或个人咨询会议与 STI 发病率降低幅度更大相关,持续时间较短的干预措施也与 STI 预防相关,尽管证据有限,无法确定这些干预措施与 STI 减少相关的效果是否能持续 1 年以上。