| Literature DB >> 21749808 |
Oriol Mitjà1, Russell Hays, Anthony Ipai, David Gubaila, Francis Lelngei, Martin Kirara, Raymond Paru, Quique Bassat.
Abstract
To estimate failure rates after treatment with benzathine penicillin and to identify determinants of failure that affected outcomes for yaws, we conducted a cohort study of 138 patients; treatment failed in 24 (17.4%). Having low initial titers on Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test and living in a village where yaws baseline incidence was high were associated with increased likelihood of treatment failure.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21749808 PMCID: PMC3363320 DOI: 10.3201/eid/1706.101575
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Infect Dis ISSN: 1080-6040 Impact factor: 6.883
Demographic data, clinical signs/symptoms, laboratory results, and outcome after treatment of yaws in 138 case-patients, Papua New Guinea, January–September, 2009*
| Characteristic | Total no. (%) patients, N = 138 |
|---|---|
| Mean age, y (SD) | 9.6 (4.4) |
| Male sex | 81 (58.7) |
| VDRL titer | |
| 16 | 54 (39.1) |
| 32 | 33 (23.9) |
| 64 | 42 (30.4) |
| 128 | 9 (6.5) |
| Primary skin lesion | 81 (58.7) |
| Secondary stage | 63 (45.7)† |
| Family history | 36 (26.1) |
| Treatment with IM penicillin G benzathine | 138 (100.0) |
| Clinical healing | 132 (95.7) |
| Concurrent disease | 7 (5.1)‡ |
| Seroconversion | 63 (45.7) |
| Serologically defined treatment failure | 24 (17.4) |
*VDRL, Venereal Disease Research Laboratory; IM, intramuscular. †Includes 7 cases of early yaws osteoperiostitis, among whom were 3 patients with dactylilitis. ‡Includes 3 cases of Plasmodium falciparum malaria, 1 case of P. vivax malaria, 1 case of acute diarrhea diagnosed at the 12-month follow-up visit, and 2 case-patients with a chronic underlying disease (1 case of congenital heart disease and 1 case of chronic asthma).
Figure 1Painless ulcer with raised edges corresponding to a primary yaws skin lesion on an infant case-patient’s leg, Papua New Guinea, 2009. Source of photograph: Lihir Medical Centre, Dr Oriol Mitjá.
Figure 2Map of Lihir Island, Papua New Guinea, showing incidence of infection in the 24 villages where cases of yaws were diagnosed, 2009. Lihir Medical Center is located in Londolovit village. Incidence proportions are shown within parentheses.
Association between characteristics of case-patients and Treponema pertenue infection treatment failure, Papua New Guinea, January–September 2009*
| Characteristic | No. (%) patients treated | Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Success, n = 114 | Failure, n = 24 | OR (95% CI) | p value | OR (95% CI) | p value | |||
| Mean age, y (SD) | 9.54 (4.69) | 10.13 (2.96) | 0.58 (−1.39 to 2.56) | 0.56 | NA | NA | ||
| Male sex | 69 (60.5) | 12 (50.0) | 0.65 (0.27–1.58) | 0.34 | NA | NA | ||
| Lived in a high-incidence village | 69 (60.5) | 21 (87.5) | 4.57 (1.29–16.20) | 0.02 | 3.75 (1.02–13.76) | 0.04 | ||
| Secondary yaws | 49 (43.0) | 14 (58.3) | 1.86 (0.76–4.53) | 0.17 | 1.01 (0.37–2.75) | 0.99 | ||
| Clinical healing | 108 (94.7) | 24 (100.0) | NA | 0.59 | NA | NA | ||
| Positive family history | 27 (23.7) | 9 (37.5) | 1.93 (0.76–4.91) | 0.17 | 1.91 (0.70–5.28) | 0.20 | ||
| VDRL titer | 67 (58.8) | 21 (87.5) | 4.91 (1.39–17.41) | 0.01 | 4.05 (1.06–15.38) | 0.04 | ||
*p<0.05 was considered significant. OR, odds ratio; CI, confidence interval; NA, not applicable; VDRL, Venereal Disease Research Laboratory test.