London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Faculty of Infectious & Tropical Diseases - London, United Kingdom.
Secretaria de Estado da Saúde de São Paulo, STD/AIDS Reference and Training Center - São Paulo (SP), Brazil.
Rev Bras Epidemiol. 2024 Aug 19;27Suppl 1(Suppl 1):e240009.supl.1. doi: 10.1590/1980-549720240009.supl.1. eCollection 2024.
This study aimed to determine the acceptability and factors associated with uptake of a physical examination for the detection of symptomatic sexually transmitted infections (STIs) by transgender women and travestis in Brazil.
TransOdara was a multi-centric, cross-sectional STI prevalence study conducted among transgender women and travestis in five capital cities (Campo Grande, Manaus, Porto Alegre, Salvador and São Paulo) representing all Brazilian regions, between December 2019 and July 2021. A total of 1,317 self-identified transgender women and travestis aged ≥18 years were recruited using respondent-driven sampling and responded to a standard questionnaire. A medical consultation was offered including a physical examination and collection of samples from multiple sites to detect various STIs. Factors associated with uptake were investigated by reviewing demographic characteristics of participants who gave permission for physical examination (general, genital, and anorectal).
Most participants (65.4%, 95% confidence interval - 95%CI 62.7-68.0) gave permission for a general examination (including oropharyngeal), with fewer permitting genital (42.3%, 95%CI 39.6-46.0) or anorectal (42.1%, 95%CI 39.4-44.9) examinations. Overall, 34.4% (95%CI 31.8-37.0) of participants refused all examinations. Participants with STI symptoms were significantly more likely to give permission for full examination than asymptomatic participants (64.3 vs. 37.4%, adjusted odds ratio - AOR=3.6, 95%CI 2.4-5.5). Other factors significantly associated with uptake of a full examination in multivariate analysis included age (AOR=1.5 for ≥25 years), religion (AOR=1.7 for Afro-Brazilian, AOR=1.9 for other religions compared to no religion), and education (AOR=2.0 for higher-level).
In the context of STI management, this study found limited acceptance of anogenital examinations among transgender women and travestis, with higher acceptance among those with STI symptoms.
本研究旨在确定巴西跨性别女性和变装者接受体检以检测有症状的性传播感染(STI)的可接受性和相关因素。
跨性别女性和变装者性传播感染患病率多中心横断面研究(TransOdara)于 2019 年 12 月至 2021 年 7 月在巴西五个首府城市(坎波格兰德、马瑙斯、阿雷格里港、萨尔瓦多和圣保罗)进行,这些城市代表了巴西所有地区,共招募了 1317 名年龄≥18 岁的自我认同的跨性别女性和变装者,采用应答者驱动抽样法,并对他们进行了标准问卷的调查。提供了医疗咨询,包括体检和从多个部位采集样本,以检测各种 STI。通过审查允许进行体检(一般、生殖器和肛门直肠)的参与者的人口统计学特征,研究了与接受程度相关的因素。
大多数参与者(65.4%,95%置信区间[95%CI]为 62.7-68.0)允许进行一般检查(包括口咽),而较少的人允许进行生殖器(42.3%,95%CI 为 39.6-46.0)或肛门直肠(42.1%,95%CI 为 39.4-44.9)检查。总体而言,34.4%(95%CI 为 31.8-37.0)的参与者拒绝了所有检查。有 STI 症状的参与者与无症状参与者相比,更有可能允许进行全面检查(64.3%比 37.4%,调整后的优势比[OR]为 3.6,95%CI 为 2.4-5.5)。多变量分析中与全面检查接受率显著相关的其他因素包括年龄(≥25 岁者为 1.5)、宗教(与无宗教相比,非裔巴西人为 1.7,其他宗教为 1.9)和教育(高等教育为 2.0)。
在 STI 管理方面,本研究发现跨性别女性和变装者对肛门生殖器检查的接受程度有限,有 STI 症状者的接受程度较高。