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Overview. Why STDs?Re-emergence of syphilis and implications for HIV transmission Chlamydia - the silent epidemic Emergence of drug-resistant gonorrhea. Overview of Complications of Sexually Transmitted Diseases. Fetal Wastage*Low Birthweight*Congenital Infection*. Upper Tract Infection. System
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1. Overview of STD Epidemiologic Trends and STD Control Program Initiatives Gail Bolan MD
Chief, STD Control Branch
CA Department of Public Health
March 31, 2008
2. Overview Why STDs?
Re-emergence of syphilis and implications for HIV transmission
Chlamydia - the silent epidemic
Emergence of drug-resistant gonorrhea
4. How STIs Increase the Risk of HIV Transmission
5. Increased Transmission of HIV in the Presence of other STDs By Increasing Susceptibility
Mucosal breakdown due to genital ulcer may facilitate HIV entry
Recruitment of WBCs to the site of active infection may act a an area of increased HIV receptors
By Increasing Infectiousness
Increase of HIV viral load in semen, genital secretions and genital ulcers
6. Increased Transmission of HIV in the Presence of other STDs Being infected with a STD may make it 2 to 23 times easier to transmit HIV, depending on the specific STD
Identifying those with both HIV and other STDs and then treating their STDs, may be able to reduce new HIV infections by 23%
Detection and treatment of STDs is an important HIV prevention strategy
8. STD Transmission Dynamics R0=ß D c
9. Core Populations Contribute a disproportionate share to the distribution of STDs
Contribute to sustaining a changing STD rate in the community
Contribute to transmission between individuals
10. 10 Core Public Health Functions and STD Activities
11. 10 Core Public Health Functions and STD Activities
12. STD Prevention and Control Interventions Health Education
Behavioral Interventions
Screening and Timely Treatment of Asymptomatic Persons
Diagnosis and Timely Treatment of Symptomatic Persons
Partner Management
Vaccination
Structural Interventions
13. Empiric STD Treatment Core STD Control strategy
syndromes and contacts (“epi treat”)
principle is to over treat the individual for the health of the community
Independent of test results
Prevalence threshold for empiric treatment is unclear
Balance public health benefit with:
individual costs
prudent antimicrobial use
14. Diagnostic Considerations with Empiric Treatment Specific testing is recommended for prevention and public health purposes
reporting and surveillance is mandatory
additional case findings may occur through partner referral efforts
patient referral education and risk reduction counseling may be more effective
compliance with treatment regimens may be improved.
15. STD Prevention and Control Program Approaches Population-based
Science-based
Partnerships
Integrate at the client level
No one magic bullet
Prioritize
Evaluate and redirect efforts through available existing funds or new funds
16. Reportable STDs Which diseases?
CT,GC, Syphilis, Chancroid, HSV, LGV, GI
Syndromes- Non-gonococcal Urethritis (NGU) and Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID)
By whom?
Provider and Laboratory
When?
Within one working day versus within seven calendar days
17. Limitations of Current STD Surveillance Systems Problems with underreporting and empirical treatment
Asymptomatic infections so many cases not detected
Cases reflect who is accessing care
No co-morbidity data
No behavioral risk factor data
18. STD Surveillance in California
19. Gender Asymmetry of STDs:Why Women are at Increased Risk Women are more likely than men to get STDs
Power dynamics
Prevention technologies
Anatomy
Women are less likely than men to seek cure
Frequency of symptoms
Social stigma
Women are more difficult to diagnose
Women suffer more severe biological and social consequences
20. Normal CervixEffacement of Transitional Zone (SCJ)
21. Factors Contributing to Racial Differences reporting bias
poverty and lack of access to health care
high prevalence of STD in the community
not disease susceptibility
not behavior
25. Syphilis Treponema pallidum
26. Syphilis: Overview of Stages This slides gives an overview of the natural history of syphilis, with symptomatic and latent stages.This slides gives an overview of the natural history of syphilis, with symptomatic and latent stages.
27. Risk Factors for Syphilis socioeconomic class
exchange of sexual services for drugs
crack cocaine
IDU
multiple sex partners
residence in high prevalence disease areas
lack of access to health care
28. Risk Factors for Congenital Syphilis Lack of prenatal care (56%)
Lack of screening during pregnancy (14%)
Infection acquired late in pregnancy (14%)
Treatment failure (8%)
Physician delay (6%)
Lab error (2%)
30. Epidemiologic Vulnerability of Syphilis No animal reservoir
Long incubation period
Limited infectiousness
Low cost and widely available diagnostic tests
Single dose therapy
No antimicrobial resistance
31. Syphilis Elimination:Public Health Importance Important, measurable health outcomes
Substantial cost savings
Annual cost savings of ~1 billion
Supports multiple public health goals
Reduction of racial disparities
Infectious disease control, including HIV prevention
Bio-terrorism preparedness
Reproductive health and infant health
Identifies opportunities to improve public health infrastructure
Focus for critical collaboration between communities & health departments
Addresses unfinished history & broken trust
32. Key Steps Necessary to Eliminate Syphilis Improve surveillance capacity and use CD models
Develop regional and local rapid outbreak response teams
Design health care infrastructure for testing, treatment and prevention of at-risk persons, especially sexual and social networks
Create partnerships and linkages with organizations serving at-risk populations
33. Syphilis EliminationNational Goals by 2005 Reduce P & S syphilis to <1,000 cases (0.4 cases per 100,000 population)
California <150 cases
Increase percentage of syphilis-free counties to at least 90%
35. Congenital Syphilis Cases in Infants < 1 Year of Age versus Female Primary & Secondary Syphilis Rates, California, 1990–2005
40. Why is syphilis increasing among MSMs? Improved HIV therapy, well-being, and survival
“Prevention fatigue”
Increased use of erectile dysfunction drugs, methamphetamine, poppers
Old & new ways to meet partners
Baths, parks
Internet
Anonymous partners
False reassurance afforded by HIV serosorting?
Lack of prevention emphasis in HIV primary care settings?
41. Sexual Risk Behavior Among MSM, San Francisco (1998-2003) In parallel with the increasing rates for syphilis and gonorrhea, there has been an increasing rate of high-risk sexual behavior among MSM.
This slide represents trends in sexual risk behavior from 1998 to 2003 as measured by The Stop Aids project. The top yellow line represents report of unprotected sex with two or more partners in the last six months. The lower red line represents report of unprotected anal sex with two or more partners of unknown HIV serostatus in the past six months. Each line shows an upward trend since 1998.
In parallel with the increasing rates for syphilis and gonorrhea, there has been an increasing rate of high-risk sexual behavior among MSM.
This slide represents trends in sexual risk behavior from 1998 to 2003 as measured by The Stop Aids project. The top yellow line represents report of unprotected sex with two or more partners in the last six months. The lower red line represents report of unprotected anal sex with two or more partners of unknown HIV serostatus in the past six months. Each line shows an upward trend since 1998.
42. Selected Characteristics of MSM Syphilis Cases, California 2000-2005
44. Syphilis Prevention and Control Interventions Health Education
Behavioral Interventions
Screening and Timely Treatment of Asymptomatic Persons
Diagnosis and Timely Treatment of Symptomatic Persons
Partner Management
(Vaccination)
Structural Interventions
45. The Three “R”s of Syphilis Recognize
Rx
Report
46. Diagnostic Tests for Syphilis Darkfield / DFA-TP
PCR
VDRL/RPR
FTA-abs / TP-PA (MHA-TP)
EIA
47. Syphilis EIA Tests Treponemal test but test performance characteristics may be inferior to TP-PA (Captia)
Can be used for screening but if positive then need quantitative RPR/VDRL
Advantages if comparable sensitivity and specificity
Not miss prozones
Low cost
Both IgM and IgG tests available
No clinical value of IgM in adult syphilis diagnosis
48. Syphilis EIA Trep- Chek Testing Algorithm: Southern Kaiser
49. Syphilis Resistant to Azithromycin! I want to begin by discussing several important points of connection between STDs and HIV.
I’m leaving out the maternal/child transmission issues today; and concentrating on issues related to sexual transmission.
Most basically, we know that similar sexual and drug-use behaviors can transmit both STDs and HIV. But in addition to the actual behaviors, other biological factors come into play and can make transmission of HIV more likely or less likely. The potential interactions between HIV and STDs are in fact multiple and complex.I want to begin by discussing several important points of connection between STDs and HIV.
I’m leaving out the maternal/child transmission issues today; and concentrating on issues related to sexual transmission.
Most basically, we know that similar sexual and drug-use behaviors can transmit both STDs and HIV. But in addition to the actual behaviors, other biological factors come into play and can make transmission of HIV more likely or less likely. The potential interactions between HIV and STDs are in fact multiple and complex.
50. Syphilis TreatmentPrimary, Secondary & Early Latent Recommended regimen for adults:
Benzathine penicillin G 2.4 million units IM in a single dose
Alternatives (non-pregnant penicillin-allergic adults):
Doxycycline 100 mg po bid x 2 weeks
Tetracycline 500 mg po qid x 2 weeks
Ceftriaxone 1 g IV or IM qd x 8-10 d
Azithromycin 2 g po in a single dose
52. Bicillin® L-A for SyphilisError in Los Angeles County In March 2004, the Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Center notified county health officials that it has given the wrong medication to about 300 syphilis patients seeking treatment since 1999
Clients were administered the penicillin formula Bicillin® C-R instead of the long acting penicillin formula Bicillin® L-A (benzathine penicillin G)
The formula given to center clients contains only half the dose of benzathine penicillin G that CDC recommends for treatment of syphilis I want to begin by discussing several important points of connection between STDs and HIV.
I’m leaving out the maternal/child transmission issues today; and concentrating on issues related to sexual transmission.
Most basically, we know that similar sexual and drug-use behaviors can transmit both STDs and HIV. But in addition to the actual behaviors, other biological factors come into play and can make transmission of HIV more likely or less likely. The potential interactions between HIV and STDs are in fact multiple and complex.I want to begin by discussing several important points of connection between STDs and HIV.
I’m leaving out the maternal/child transmission issues today; and concentrating on issues related to sexual transmission.
Most basically, we know that similar sexual and drug-use behaviors can transmit both STDs and HIV. But in addition to the actual behaviors, other biological factors come into play and can make transmission of HIV more likely or less likely. The potential interactions between HIV and STDs are in fact multiple and complex.
54. Recent Examples of Missed Opportunities in California Case #1
9/26/03 30 year yo HIV-infected gay male presented to HIV care provider with a painful, erythematous rash on his groin. Rx with ketoconazole
10/2/03 returned to the clinic with a rash over 50% of his body and a serologic test was ordered.
10/9/03 returned again and a serologic test was ordered.
10/13/03 local health department received a lab report of RPR 1:8 and reactive TP-PA obtained on 10/2/03.
10/13/03 was Rx with Benzathine PCN 2.4 mu
55. Issue # 1: Missed or mistaken clinical features of symptomatic syphilis
56. Issue # 2: No presumptive treatment provided
57. Issue 3: Titer not collected near treatment date
58. Issue 4: Delays in Reportingby Labs and Providers
59. Public Health Management of Early Syphilis Cases, California 2003 Despite presentation of clinical manifestations of syphilis, diagnosis and treatment of this STD often are delayed
Presumptive treatment of syphilis appears to be infrequent; more often, diagnostic testing guides treatment decisions
Titers not obtained near date or treatment may make follow-up serologies difficult to interpret and assessment of treatment adequacy incorrect
Reporting of syphilis is frequently delayed by both providers and labs, potentiating missed opportunities for prevention
61. Partner Referral Regulations California State Law Requirements
Providers role- Instruction to the patient. It shall be the duty of the physician in attendance on a person having a venereal disease or suspect of having a venereal disease, to instruct such patient in a precautionary measures for preventing the spread of the disease, the seriousness of the disease and the necessity of treatment and prolonged medical supervision.
The attending physician in every case of venereal disease coming to him for treatment, shall endeavor to discover the source of infection as well as any sexual or any other intimate contacts while the patient was in communicable stage of the disease. The physician shall make an effort through the cooperation of the patient to bring those cases in for examination and if necessary, treatment.
62. Traditional Partner Treatment Options for Syphilis Patient referral
Provider or clinic referral
Health department referral
64. Innovation in Partner Notificationvia Internet Individuals use Web siteto notify partners
- anonymous
- free
- referrals for testing provided
http://www.inspot.org
68. Phil and the Penis on the Go
69. ChlamydiaThe Silent Epidemic
75. Risk Factors for CT Infections unmarried status
lower socio-economic conditions
multiple sexual partners
history of STD
young age
ectopy
use of oral contraceptives
concurrent gonorrhea
76. Chlamydia Prevention and Control Interventions Health Education
Behavioral Interventions
Screening and Treatment of Asymptomatic Persons
Diagnosis and Treatment of Symptomatic Persons
Partner Management
Vaccination
Structural Interventions
77. Why Chlamydia & Why Now? Most common communicable disease reported disease in California
Over 100,000 reported cases
Over 75% of cases are seen in the private sector
Significant health consequences
Most common cause of preventable infertility
Facilitates sexual transmission of HIV
New technology = new opportunity
Urine tests & single dose treatment = easier to reach, treat & cure at-risk populations
HEDIS increases private sector interest
Potential public/private partnership
78. Action Agenda for Chlamydia Prevention and Control in California: A Five Year Plan
79. California Chlamydia Action Coalition A State-Wide Public-Private Partnership funded by the California HealthCare Foundation State and local health departments
Managed Care Organizations
Community Based Organizations
Private providers and professional societies
Family Planning, school-based, and correctional programs
Women’s Health Organizations
Laboratories and University researchers
Diagnostic and pharmaceutical companies
Policymakers and the public
California Health Care Foundation
State and local health departments
Managed Care Organizations
Community Based Organizations
Private providers and professional societies
Family Planning, school-based, and correctional programs
Women’s Health Organizations
Laboratories and University researchers
Diagnostic and pharmaceutical companies
Policymakers and the public
California Health Care Foundation
81. Clinic-based Chlamydia Screening Recommendations US Preventive Services Task Force, 2001
Sexually active women age 25 and younger should be screened annually
Endorsed by the CDC, ACOG & other medical associations
As of 2000, NCQA HEDIS measure In their 1993 STD Treatment Guidelines, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended routine screening for chlamydia in at risk populations. The CDC currently recommends annual screening for adolescents under age 20. Women ages 20-24 should be screened if they have new or multiple sex partners and inconsistent condom use.
These or similar guidelines have been developed by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and many prominent medical societies: American Medical Association, American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, American Academy of Family Practice, and American Academy of Pediatrics.In their 1993 STD Treatment Guidelines, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended routine screening for chlamydia in at risk populations. The CDC currently recommends annual screening for adolescents under age 20. Women ages 20-24 should be screened if they have new or multiple sex partners and inconsistent condom use.
These or similar guidelines have been developed by the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force and many prominent medical societies: American Medical Association, American College of Obstetrics and Gynecology, American Academy of Family Practice, and American Academy of Pediatrics.
82. Chlamydia Screening HEDIS Measure The Measure: the percentage of Medicaid and commercially enrolled women 15 through 25 who were identified as sexually active, who were continuously enrolled during the reporting year, and who have at least one test for chlamydia during the reporting year.
Number tested
83. Chlamydia Care Quality Improvement Toolbox A collection of resources that can be utilized by health plans, medical groups and provider organizations to:
Educate physicians, providers, members and patients about chlamydia screening, diagnosis, treatment and public health laws
Promote compliance with guidelines
84. Selection of Screening Tests Test sensitivity
Test specificity, PPV and need for additional testing
Ease of specimen collection
Cost
Other
Need to test nongenital specimens (rectum, pharynx)
Need for antimicrobial susceptibility testing
86. Tests to Detect Chlamydia EIA
DNA probe
DFA
Culture
NAATs * Sensitivity
50-65%
60-70%
65-70%
70-80%
85-90%
87. Recommend Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests for Detecting Chlamydia Noninvasive
Urine and self-collected vaginal swabs
Non-clinical settings
Pelvic and genital exams not necessary
Clinic intake areas
Community based organizations
Home testing
90. Are we screening the wrong women? The majority of women in the target age range (25 and younger) are NOT being screened
Meanwhile
A large proportion of current testing is being done for women over age 25
91. Chlamydia Test Volume and Prevalence by Age among Female Patients in Public and Private Clinics
92. Factors to Consider when Designing a Cost-effective Screening Program Prevalence of disease in population
Sensitivity and specificity of screening criteria
Test performance characteristics of diagnostic test
Cost of test
Cost of treatment and complications
93. Uses and Abuses of Screening Tests Screening tests are ubiquitous in practice
Principles of screening are widely misunderstood
Goal of screening is to test apparently well people to find those at increased risk of a disease or disorder
Inappropriate screening is harmful
Injurious to one’s health
Stigmatizing
Costly
94. When Earlier Diagnosis is Worth the Cost ? If improves survival or quality of life
If the clinician has the time to manage the Dx before Sx develop
If the patient with an earlier Dx will comply with intervention
If the screening program effectiveness has been established
If the test cost, accuracy and acceptability are acceptable to the patient and society
(Sackett, Clinical Epidemiology: a basic science for clinical medicine)
95. Current Chlamydia TreatmentAdolescents and Adults Recommended regimens:
Azithromycin 1 g PO x 1
Doxycycline 100 mg PO BID x 7 d
Alternative regimens:
Erythromycin base 500 mg PO QID x 7 d
Erythro ethylsuccinate 800 mg PO QID x 7 d
Ofloxacin 300 mg PO BID x 7 d
Levofloxacin 500 mg PO QD x 7 d
96. Partner Treatment Options for Chlamydia Patient referral
Provider or clinic referral
Health department referral
97. Patient-Delivered Partner Therapy for Chlamydia Infection Untreated infection in male partner is a risk factor for repeat infection in women
Repeat infections place women at increased risk of upper tract complications
Single dose therapy is very safe and easy to administer
PDPT reduces the rate of re-infection compared to patient referral
PDPT legislation enacted January 1, 2001 Amendment to the Business and Professions and Health and Safety Codes
Sets forth exceptions to the Medical Practice Act and is does not constitute unprofessional conduct
“Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a physician, nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, and physician assistant who diagnoses a sexually transmitted chlamydia infection may prescribe to that patient’s sexual partner or partners without examination of that patient’s partner or partners”
Amendment to the Business and Professions and Health and Safety Codes
Sets forth exceptions to the Medical Practice Act and is does not constitute unprofessional conduct
“Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a physician, nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, and physician assistant who diagnoses a sexually transmitted chlamydia infection may prescribe to that patient’s sexual partner or partners without examination of that patient’s partner or partners”
98. PDPT Clinical Trial: Reinfection Rates by Study Arm Diagnosis: Uncomplicated genital chlamydia infection
First-line: Attempt to bring partners in for evaluation and treatment
Priority patients: Females with male partners
Partners: Males who are uninsured or unlikely to seek medical services
Medication: Azithromycin 1.0 g orally once
Number of doses: Limited to the number of sex partners in past 60 days
Education materials must accompany medication
Patient counseling: Abstinence until 7 days after treatment and until 7 days after partners have been treated
Evaluation: Recommend re-test patients for chlamydia 3-4 months after treatment
Adverse reactions: Report to 1-866-556-3730Diagnosis: Uncomplicated genital chlamydia infection
First-line: Attempt to bring partners in for evaluation and treatment
Priority patients: Females with male partners
Partners: Males who are uninsured or unlikely to seek medical services
Medication: Azithromycin 1.0 g orally once
Number of doses: Limited to the number of sex partners in past 60 days
Education materials must accompany medication
Patient counseling: Abstinence until 7 days after treatment and until 7 days after partners have been treated
Evaluation: Recommend re-test patients for chlamydia 3-4 months after treatment
Adverse reactions: Report to 1-866-556-3730
99. Patient Delivered Partner Therapy Legislation in CA (Ortiz bill SB 648) Enacted January 1, 2001
Amendment to the Business and Professions and Health and Safety Codes
Sets forth exceptions to the Medical Practice Act and is does not constitute unprofessional conduct
“Notwithstanding any other provision of law, a physician, nurse practitioner, certified nurse-midwife, and physician assistant who diagnoses a sexually transmitted chlamydia infection may prescribe to that patient’s sexual partner or partners without examination of that patient’s partner or partners”
101. Infection During Follow-up Among Patients Completing the EPT Trial
102. Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Expedited Partner Treatment Expedited Partner Treatment (EPT) or Patient-Delivered Partner Treatment (PDPT)
Add as option for partner management for heterosexual men and women
First line management is clinical evaluation
Concern regarding co-morbidities (e.g., PID in women, HIV in MSM)
CDC will develop separate guidance on EPT/PDPT
103. The 3 most common barriers for both NPs and MDs were concern that PDPT results in incomplete care for the partner, concern that PDPT is dangerous without knowing the partner’s medical or allergy history, and concern that the practice will not be reimbursed
About 35% of MDs and 25% of NPs were concerned about being sued, just over 20% thought that PDPT should only be given if the partner’s name is given, and fewer than 10% agreed that PDPT is only for male partners of female cases.
Next looked at barriers as predictors of routine use of PDPT
For both MDs and NPs, reporting one of 3 barriers was significantly associated with not routinely using PDPT in practice: concern about Incomplete care, not knowing medical/allergy history, and concern about being sued. Although concern that the practice of PDPT would not be paid for was common, it was not significantly associated with reported PDPT use.
The 3 most common barriers for both NPs and MDs were concern that PDPT results in incomplete care for the partner, concern that PDPT is dangerous without knowing the partner’s medical or allergy history, and concern that the practice will not be reimbursed
About 35% of MDs and 25% of NPs were concerned about being sued, just over 20% thought that PDPT should only be given if the partner’s name is given, and fewer than 10% agreed that PDPT is only for male partners of female cases.
Next looked at barriers as predictors of routine use of PDPT
For both MDs and NPs, reporting one of 3 barriers was significantly associated with not routinely using PDPT in practice: concern about Incomplete care, not knowing medical/allergy history, and concern about being sued. Although concern that the practice of PDPT would not be paid for was common, it was not significantly associated with reported PDPT use.
104. Chlamydia and Gonorrhea Repeat Infection1-6 months after infectionby Data Source, 2004 This is the epi curve for years 2001-2003 of gonorrhea cases by month in Butte County. These are all the cases. The aqua green represents Oroville cases, the light blue is Chico and the top grey is Other area.
Oroville cases, represented in green, represent the majority of gonorrhea cases. For this reason we focused our investigation on Oroville case-patients.This is the epi curve for years 2001-2003 of gonorrhea cases by month in Butte County. These are all the cases. The aqua green represents Oroville cases, the light blue is Chico and the top grey is Other area.
Oroville cases, represented in green, represent the majority of gonorrhea cases. For this reason we focused our investigation on Oroville case-patients.
105. Recommendations for Chlamydia Re-Testing after Treatment Prefer “re-testing” to “re-screening”
High rates of re-infection after treatment
Consider re-testing of females; some experts suggest re-testing of males
Time frame: 3 months after treatment
106. Chlamydia Screening in Heterosexual Males Screening in males not routinely recommended
Need evidence of reduction of infection in women to be cost effective
However, selective screening in high prevalence populations may be beneficial
Modeling suggests Chlamydia prevalence among males should be at least 6%
CDC will develop separate guidance in this area
107.
109. Gonorrhea
114. Gonorrhea Increases in California, 1999 versus 2005
115. Gonorrhea Increases in California, 1999 versus 2005
116. Outbreak Response Alert providers
Proper treatment
Screen at risk asymptomatic patients
Treat partners
Investigate cases
Risk patterns
Refine prevention/intervention strategies
117. California Enhanced Syphilis / Enhanced Gonorrhea DataClinical Setting of Diagnosis by Gender - 2004
118. California Enhanced Syphilis / Enhanced Gonorrhea DataSelected Risk Data by Gender of Sex Partners - 2004
119. Emerging Antimicrobial Resistance Neisseria gonorrhoeae
Treponema pallidum
Herpes simplex virus
Trichomonas
Chlamydia trachomatis
120. Gonococcal Isolate Surveillance Project (GISP) : United States, 2003
122. Gonorrhea Treatment in California Recommended regimens:
Ceftriaxone 125 mg IM x 1
Cefixime 400 mg PO x 1
Alternative oral regimen:
Cefpodoxime 400 mg po x 1
Alternatives for PCN allergic:
Spectinomycin 2 g IM x 1
Azithromycin 2 gm
Co-treat for chlamydia unless ruled out by NAAT
123. for patients with gonorrhea in California…
124. California Enhanced Gonorrhea DataAny Fluroquinolone Use by Health Jurisdiction - 2004
125. HSV Issues Role of type-specific HSV serologic tests
Role of suppresssive therapy to reduce transmission
126. Genital Herpes – Testing Issues Type-specific HSV-2 serology tests may be useful:
Recurrent/atypical symptoms with negative culture
Clinical diagnosis without lab confirmation
Patients with a partner with genital HSV
Some experts recommend serology tests:
Patients who request testing or as part of “comprehensive STD evaluation”
Multiple partners, HIV-infected, MSM with high HIV risk, (pregnancy)
Universal screening NOT recommended
127. HSV Shedding and Transmission Asymptomatic shedding more common in first 2 years (5-10% of days), less common later (2% of days)
Research with discordant couples finds sexual transmission ~12% per year
17% male to female
4% female to male
Most sexual transmission occurs during symptomatic shedding
Suppression therapy reduces both shedding and transmission
128. Rates of Transmission of HSV-2 to Susceptible Partners is Reduced with Once-Daily Suppressive Therapy NOTE: Shedding study was a substudy (N=89) of this one… source partners swabbed the genital region daily for 2 months for testing by PCR.
If the source partner had recurrences, they were treated with episodic therapy of 500mg twice daily valacyclovir for 5 days, and then returned to randomly assigned medication.
Corey L, Wald A, Patel R, Sacks SL, Tyring SK, Warren T, Douglas JM Jr, Paavonen J, Morrow RA, Beutner KR, Stratchounsky LS, Mertz G, Keene ON, Watson HA, Tait D, Vargas-Cortes M; Valacyclovir HSV Transmission Study Group. Once-daily valacyclovir to reduce the risk of transmission of genital herpes. N Engl J Med. 2004 Jan 1;350(1):11-20. NOTE: Shedding study was a substudy (N=89) of this one… source partners swabbed the genital region daily for 2 months for testing by PCR.
If the source partner had recurrences, they were treated with episodic therapy of 500mg twice daily valacyclovir for 5 days, and then returned to randomly assigned medication.
Corey L, Wald A, Patel R, Sacks SL, Tyring SK, Warren T, Douglas JM Jr, Paavonen J, Morrow RA, Beutner KR, Stratchounsky LS, Mertz G, Keene ON, Watson HA, Tait D, Vargas-Cortes M; Valacyclovir HSV Transmission Study Group. Once-daily valacyclovir to reduce the risk of transmission of genital herpes. N Engl J Med. 2004 Jan 1;350(1):11-20.
129. Genital Herpes – Treatment Issues Prevention of sexual transmission:
Antiviral treatment at suppression dose
Indications may include: discordant couples, persons with multiple partners, MSM
Reassess discordant partner annually for seroconversion
Counsel regarding condoms, disclosure, abstinence
130. Whew!
Where
to
from
here?
131. Data for Each County:
www.dhs.ca.gov/ps/dcdc/STD/stddatasummaries.htm
132. STD Resources California STD/HIV Prevention Training Center
www.stdhivtraining.org
California STD Control Branch
www.dhs.ca.gov/ps/dcdc/STD/stdindex.htm
CDC STD Program
www.cdc.gov/std
California Chlamydia Action Coalition
www.ucsf.edu/castd