| Literature DB >> 22567090 |
Navjyot K Vidwan1, Annie Regi, Mark Steinhoff, Jill S Huppert, Mary Allen Staat, Caitlin Dodd, Rida Nongrum, Shalini Anandan, Valsan Verghese.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence and risk factors for Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) infection in pregnant women and the rate of transmission of CT to infants.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22567090 PMCID: PMC3342301 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0034794
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
CT Prevalence Studies in India.
| Area | Year | Age group | Study population | N | Sample | Test | Prevalence | Ref |
| Vellore, India | 1993 | Not available | Pregnant women | 273 | Endocervical swab | Chlamydiazyme kit (Abbott, USA) | 3.3% (95% CI: 1.2%–5.4%) | 5 |
| New Delhi, India | 1995 | Mean Age: 34.9 yrs | Generally healthy women, Gynecological clinic(outpatient department) | 257 | Endocervical swab | Chlamydiazyme kit (Abbott, USA) | 23.3% | 14 |
| Mumbai, Inner City | 1998 | ≤35 yrs | Suspected PID, Infertility | 446 | Endocervical swab | ELISA | 0.5% | 7 |
| Mumbai | 2001 | 18–42 yrs | Gynecological clinic, complications associatedwith reproductive health | 123 | Endocervical swab | Chlamydiazyme kit (Abbott, USA) | 1.7 to 20% among different risk categories | 11 |
| New Delhi | 2003 | 18–40 yrs | Symptomatic women Gynecological clinic | 280 | Endocervical swab | NAAT | 28% (18–25 yrs) | 13 |
| New Delhi | 2003 | 19–36 yrs | Pregnant women | 350 | Endocervical swab | DFA & PCR | 18.8% (95% CI 14.76–22.96%) | 12 |
| Tamil Nadu, South India | 2004 | 15–45 yrs | Healthy adult population, clinic | 1066 (serum)841 (urine)Female samples | Serum, urine | IgM-ELISA,urine NAAT | 3.3% ELISA, 1.1% PCR (95% CI: 0.4–1.8%) | 8 |
| Chennai | 2005 | N/A | STI clinic(high risk) | 143 men & women | Serum, genital swab endocervical/urethral | Culture/nested PCR (MOMP): CT Serum: IgG | 30.8% by nested PCR(MOMP) | 9 |
| Aligarh, North India | 2009 | 18–40 yrs | Obstetric clinic, secondary infertility, pregnant women (control subjects) | 70 | Endocervical swab | Cell culture, ELISA | 55%–2°infertility; 5.5% pregnant women | 10 |
| Karnataka State,South India | 2010 | Mean age: 30.7 yrs | Symptomatic women Gynecological clinic | 412 | Endocervical swab | NAAT | 2.6%, vaginal discharge; 2.7% vaginal discharge with clinical cervicitis | 6 |
This table shows a review on Indian data which show a wide variation in CT prevalence and methods of laboratory confirmation.
Figure 1Study Flow Chart.
April 2009 to January 2010, 7955 women delivered during the recruitment period. 1198 (88%) women were enrolled; 799 endocervical samples from the 1198 enrolled subjects were collected and data on 784 participants with both RDT and NAAT results are reported.
Baseline characteristics of Enrolled Mothers, Enrolled Tested mothers, and Enrolled and not Tested.
| Enrolled Mothers | Enrolled Tested | Enrolled Not Tested | P-Value of Tested mothers vs. Untested mothers | ||||
| N | Percent | N | Percent | N | Percent | ||
|
| 1198 | 783 | 415 |
| |||
| 18–23 years | 384 | 32.05 | 231 | 29.50 | 153 | 36.87 | |
| 24–29 years | 625 | 52.17 | 425 | 54.28 | 200 | 48.19 | |
| ≥30 years | 189 | 15.78 | 127 | 16.22 | 62 | 14.94 | |
|
| 1198 | 783 | 415 |
| |||
| Other | 935 | 78.05 | 649 | 82.89 | 286 | 68.91 | |
| Primigravida | 263 | 21.90 | 134 | 17.11 | 129 | 31.08 | |
|
| 1195 | 780 | 415 |
| |||
| Illiterate | 31 | 2.59 | 20 | 2.56 | 11 | 2.65 | |
| Primary Education | 443 | 37.07 | 277 | 35.51 | 166 | 40 | |
| Secondary/Tertiary | 293 | 24.52 | 183 | 23.46 | 110 | 26.51 | |
| University Diploma | 428 | 35.82 | 300 | 38.46 | 128 | 30.84 | |
|
| 1121 | 731 | 390 |
| |||
| (<5000 Rs/mo) | 795 | 70.92 | 499 | 68.26 | 296 | 75.9 | |
| (5000–10,000 Rs/mo) | 229 | 20.43 | 162 | 22.16 | 67 | 17.18 | |
| (>10,000 Rs/mo) | 97 | 8.65 | 70 | 9.58 | 27 | 6.92 | |
|
| 1196 | 781 | 415 |
| |||
| Village | 604 | 50.50 | 393 | 50.32 | 211 | 50.84 | |
| Urban | 592 | 49.50 | 388 | 49.68 | 204 | 49.16 | |
|
| 1193 | 779 | 414 |
| |||
| Hindu | 964 | 80.80 | 635 | 81.51 | 329 | 79.47 | |
| Muslim | 165 | 13.83 | 96 | 12.32 | 69 | 16.67 | |
| Christian | 62 | 5.20 | 47 | 6.03 | 15 | 3.62 | |
| Jain | 2 | 0.17 | 1 | 0.13 | 1 | .24 | |
|
| 1183 | 775 | 408 |
| |||
| No | 1147 | 96.96 | 751 | 96.90 | 396 | 97.06 | |
| Yes | 6 | 0.51 | 3 | 0.39 | 3 | .74 | |
| Don’t Know | 30 | 2.54 | 21 | 2.71 | 9 | 2.21 | |
|
| 1190 | 775 | 415 |
| |||
| Only Husband | 1189 | 99.92 | 774 | 99.87 | 415 | 100 | |
| Others | 1 | 0.08 | 1 | 0.13 | |||
(50Rs = 1 USD).
This table shows that tested mothers were significantly older, multiparous, and higher socio-economic group compared to untested mothers (p = 0.03, p = <0.0001, and p = 0.03; respectively).
Comparison of NAAT test with rapid diagnostic test.
| RDT | |||
| NAAT | Positive | Negative | Total |
| Positive | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Negative | 71 | 712 | 783 |
| Total | 71 | 713 | 784 |
| Cohen’s Kappa = −0.0025 | |||
| Kendall’s Tau B = −0.0113 | |||
Cohen’s Kappa, which tests the agreement between two tests is negative, showing no agreement. Kendall’s Tau B is also negative, showing very slight negative association (inversion) between the two tests. The association here is very limited.
The prevalence detected using the NAAT (considered the gold standard for this study) was 0.1% (95% CI: 0–0.38%).
Neonate Characteristics.
| N | Percent | ||
|
| |||
| Forceps | 164 | 21.35 | |
| C Section | 201 | 26.17 | |
| Normal Vaginal | 403 | 52.47 | |
|
| |||
| No | 681 | 88.67 | |
| Yes (RDS, Sepsis, IUGR, NICU) | 87 | 11.33 | |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 768 | 39.0 | 1.359 |
|
| 762 | 2.99 | 0.455 |
There were 768 newborn specimens (NP and conjunctival) obtained from the neonates of the 784 enrolled mothers who had both NAAT and RDT results reported. This table describes the neonatal characteristics.