Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, School of Public Health, Makerere University College of Health Sciences. P.O. Box 7072, Kampala, Uganda.
STD Clinic/Ward 12 Mulago National Referral Hospital.
Afr Health Sci. 2022 Sep;22(3):62-71. doi: 10.4314/ahs.v22i3.8.
Sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) management in sub-Saharan Africa is syndromic but molecular diagnostics provide quicker, sensitive diagnosis and treatment. Effective STD control hinges on identification and treatment of infected persons and sexual partner contact tracing.
This study assessed feasibility of using the Xpert CT/NG test to identify prevalent Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) and Neisseria gonorrhea (NG) infections among STD clinic attendees and their sexual partners and tested for antimicrobial resistance for N. gonorrhea.
A cross-sectional study was conducted at 4 outpatient STD clinics in Kampala, Uganda from February 2019 to October 2019. Participants received a syndromic diagnosis, were tested for NG and CT, as well as their sexual partners. Urine (men) and high vaginal swabs (women) were collected, examined using Xpert CT/NG assay. A total of 79 participants were enrolled at baseline of whom 25 had CT/NG. 21 partners of infected baseline participants and 7 partners of the 21 primary partners were enrolled.
The mean age of the reported sexual partners was 26 (18-43) years. The prevalence of NG was 25% at baseline and 18 % for CT. Nine (11.4%) people were dually infected. Men were more likely to have NG (p<0.001) at multivariable level. Two participants tested HIV-1 positive. On microbiological culture, 8 samples (2.5%) grew NG and all were resistant to penicillin, ciprofloxacin. For CT, we found a preponderance of the F-serovar in this population.
The most prevalent organism was Neisseria gonorrhea. Generally, the prevalence of CT and NG was high. Infection proportions increased among primary partners, particularly women. Etiologic testing without partner tracing and treatment may underestimate burden of CT/NG in this population and contribute to re-infection.
在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,性传播疾病(STDs)的管理采用综合征诊断法,但分子诊断可提供更快、更敏感的诊断和治疗。有效的 STD 控制取决于感染人群的识别和治疗以及性伴侣的接触追踪。
本研究评估了使用 Xpert CT/NG 检测来识别 STD 诊所就诊者及其性伴侣中常见的沙眼衣原体(CT)和淋病奈瑟菌(NG)感染的可行性,并对淋病奈瑟菌的抗菌药物耐药性进行了检测。
本横断面研究于 2019 年 2 月至 10 月在乌干达坎帕拉的 4 家门诊 STD 诊所进行。参与者接受了综合征诊断,并接受了 NG 和 CT 检测,以及他们的性伴侣。收集尿液(男性)和阴道高位拭子(女性),使用 Xpert CT/NG 检测进行检测。共有 79 名参与者在基线时入组,其中 25 名患有 CT/NG。感染基线参与者的 21 名性伴侣和 21 名主要性伴侣中的 7 名性伴侣入组。
报告的性伴侣的平均年龄为 26(18-43)岁。NG 的基线患病率为 25%,CT 为 18%。9 人(11.4%)双重感染。在多变量水平上,男性更有可能患有 NG(p<0.001)。有 2 名参与者 HIV-1 检测呈阳性。在微生物培养中,8 份样本(2.5%)培养出 NG,所有样本均对青霉素、环丙沙星耐药。对于 CT,我们发现该人群中 F 血清型占优势。
最常见的病原体是淋病奈瑟菌。总的来说,CT 和 NG 的患病率较高。在主要性伴侣中,感染比例增加,尤其是女性。如果没有进行性伴侣追踪和治疗的病因检测,可能会低估该人群中 CT/NG 的负担,并导致再次感染。