| Literature DB >> 25590331 |
Matthew R Golden1, Roxanne P Kerani2, Mark Stenger3, James P Hughes4, Mark Aubin3, Cheryl Malinski5, King K Holmes6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Expedited partner therapy (EPT), the practice of treating the sex partners of persons with sexually transmitted infections without their medical evaluation, increases partner treatment and decreases gonorrhea and chlamydia reinfection rates. We conducted a stepped-wedge, community-level randomized trial to determine whether a public health intervention promoting EPT could increase its use and decrease chlamydia test positivity and gonorrhea incidence in women. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25590331 PMCID: PMC4295847 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1001777
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Modified for stepped-wedge design from suggested CONSORT criteria format for cluster randomized trials [47]. +Numbers of tests and cases presented as means with ranges.
Figure 2Washington State local health jurisdictions instituting an expedited partner therapy intervention in four temporally defined waves.
Study population size and characteristics in local health jurisdictions in each study wave during the year prior to the intervention (October 2006–September 2007).
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| 820,033 | 495,020 | 583,866 | 401,427 | 2,300,346 |
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| 143,091 | 80,776 | 97,661 | 69,147 | 390,675 |
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| 620/76 | 197/40 | 240/41 | 236/58 | 1,293/56 |
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| 6,563 | 5,020 | 3,398 | 2,928 | 17,909 |
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| 535 (8.2%) | 402 (8.1%) | 239 (7.1%) | 209 (7.2%) | 1,385 (7.8%) |
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| 26 | 29 | 25 | 17 | 97 |
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| 20.4 (2.6) | 20.0 (2.8) | 19.4 (2.8) | 19.7 (2.7) | 20.0 (2.7) |
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| White | 3,653 (83.4%) | 2,395 (68.3%) | 1,819 (86.2%) | 1,846 (91.2%) | 9,713 (80.8%) |
| Black | 335 (7.6%) | 84 (2.4%) | 68 (3.2%) | 70 (3.5%) | 557 (4.6%) |
| Native American | 91 (2.1%) | 105 (3.0%) | 96 (4.6%) | 50 (2.5%) | 342 (2.8%) |
| Asian | 192 (4.4%) | 37 (1.0%) | 59 (2.8%) | 33 (1.6%) | 321 (2.7%) |
| Other | 230 (5.2%) | 915 (26.1%) | 107 ((5.1%) | 59 (2.9%) | 1,311 (10.9%) |
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| 764 (12.7 | 1,638 (33.5%) | 400 (12.1%) | 244 (8.4%) | 3,046 (17.8%) |
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| Routine | 2,790 (43.7%) | 2,616 (52.9%) | 1,452 (43.5%) | 1,088 (37.8%) | 7,946 (45.3%) |
| Symptoms | 1,206 (18.5%) | 555 (11.1%) | 502 (14.8%) | 636 (21.8%) | 2,899 (16.3%) |
| STD screening | 3,120 (48.9%) | 2,493 (50.4%) | 2,110 (63.2%) | 1,422 (49.4%) | 9,145 (52.1%) |
| Exposed to | 142 (2.2%) | 74 (1.5%) | 100 (3.0%) | 88 (3.1%) | 404 (2.3%) |
| Exposed to other STI | 55 (0.9%) | 42 (0.8%) | 52 (1.6%) | 30 (1.0%) | 179 (1.0%) |
| Pregnancy-related | 800 (12.5%) | 909 (18.4%) | 365 (10.9%) | 237 (8.2%) | 2,311 (13.27%) |
| Rescreen | 174 (2.7%) | 117 (2.4%) | 98 (2.9%) | 82 (2.8%) | 471 (2.7%) |
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| History of chlamydia | 456 (7.2%) | 276 (5.6%) | 225 (6.8%) | 179 (6.6%) | 1,136 (6.6%) |
| ≥2 partner | 626 (10.1%) | 405 (8.2%) | 374 (11.4%) | 341 (12.5%) | 1,746 (10.2%) |
| New sex partner | 1,442 (23.1%) | 949 (19.2%) | 816 (24.6%) | 736 (27.1%) | 3,943 (22.9%) |
| Symptomatic partner | 287 (5.4%) | 137 (3.0%) | 122 (3.9%) | 108 (4.2%) | 654 (4.2%) |
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| 1,359 (23.6%) | 982 (20.0%) | 712 (21.6%) | 613 (23.6%) | 3,666 (22.1%) |
The population of each wave includes persons residing in the LHJs that initiated the study intervention as part of that wave.
a n = 4,379, 3,508, 2,111, and 2,024 non-missing responses for race for waves 1–4, respectively. Race and ethnicity defined based on medical provider report using a standardized reporting record.
bPatients could report more than one reason for visit.
cChlamydia diagnosis in prior year, and ≥2 sex partners, a new sex partner, or a symptomatic partner in the prior 60 d.
SD, standard deviation.
Characteristics of women tested for C. trachomatis in clinics providing outcome data for the trial compared to all women in areas of WA State participating in the trial.
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| 243,666 | 91,971[ |
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| 14–17 y | 12.4% | 17,359 (18.9%) |
| 18–20 y | 28.4% | 40,159 (43.7%) |
| 21–23 y | 35.4% | 28,522 (31.0%) |
| 24–25 y | 23.7% | 5,931 (6.5%) |
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| White | 87.3% | 65,516 (71.2%) |
| Black | 4.0% | 3,214 (3.5%) |
| Native American | 2.7% | 1,820 (2.0%) |
| Asian | 6.0% | 3,108 (3.4%) |
| Other | Not measured | 9,337 (10.2%) |
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| 15.1% | 13,375 (14.7%) |
Data are percent or number (percent).
aEstimates of sexually active women were calculated by defining the proportion of women at each age who have ever had sex in the US national data from the National Survey of Family Growth 2006–2010, and multiplying the number of women in each age group by that proportion.
bDe-duplicated; each woman contributes only one record. Data on race were missing for 9.7% of women tested in sentinel clinical sites.
Figure 3Percentage of persons with gonorrhea or chlamydial infection who received components of the study intervention in periods before and during the study intervention, by study wave.
Percentage of persons receiving (A) PDPT from their diagnosing clinician, (B) public health partner services, or (C) either PDPT or public health partner services.
*The percentage of persons receiving partner services was directly measured and is not an estimate. Consequently, there are no confidence intervals on data for this outcome.
Receipt of public health partner services within subgroups of patients during baseline and intervention periods.
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| 5,974 | 1,506 | 25.2% | 39,234 | 17,614 | 44.9% |
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| 14–19 y | 1,868 | 497 | 26.6% | 12,281 | 5,723 | 46.6% |
| 20–24 y | 2,255 | 543 | 24.1% | 15,335 | 6,938 | 45.2% |
| 25–29 y | 1,014 | 255 | 25.2% | 6,526 | 2,816 | 43.2% |
| 30–34 y | 410 | 122 | 29.8% | 2,580 | 1,079 | 41.8% |
| 35–44 y | 285 | 70 | 24.6% | 1,801 | 751 | 41.7% |
| >45 y | 85 | 15 | 17.7% | 543 | 252 | 46.4% |
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| White | 2,951 | 817 | 27.7% | 19,513 | 8,812 | 45.2% |
| Black | 532 | 163 | 30.6% | 3,708 | 1,940 | 52.3% |
| Native American | 193 | 44 | 22.8% | 1,045 | 355 | 34.0% |
| Asian | 124 | 43 | 34.7% | 1,140 | 537 | 47.1% |
| Other | 260 | 42 | 16.2% | 2,148 | 897 | 41.8% |
| Multiple | 108 | 34 | 31.5% | 680 | 250 | 51.5% |
| Unknown | 1,806 | 363 | 20.1% | 11,000 | 4,723 | 42.9% |
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| Hispanic | 910 | 179 | 19.7% | 5,626 | 2,033 | 36.1% |
| Non-Hispanic | 2,927 | 855 | 29.2% | 19,924 | 9,270 | 46.5% |
| Unknown | 2,137 | 179 | 22.1% | 13,684 | 6,311 | 46.1% |
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| Female | 4,457 | 1,139 | 25.6% | 29,885 | 13,645 | 45.7% |
| Male | 1,470 | 364 | 24.8% | 9,310 | 3,959 | 42.5% |
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| Chlamydia only | 5,248 | 1,227 | 23.4% | 36,054 | 15,907 | 44.1% |
| Gonorrhea only | 462 | 172 | 37.2% | 2,122 | 1,131 | 53.3% |
| Both | 264 | 107 | 40.5% | 1,058 | 576 | 54.4% |
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| Family planning | 1,441 | 385 | 26.7% | 8,678 | 3,513 | 40.5% |
| Women’s health | 487 | 141 | 29.0% | 3,626 | 1,691 | 46.6% |
| Private | 1,319 | 358 | 27.1% | 9,923 | 4,814 | 48.5% |
| ER/urgent care | 531 | 149 | 28.1% | 3,978 | 2,138 | 53.8% |
| Military | 385 | 26 | 6.8% | 3,730 | 1,703 | 45.7% |
| Other | 1,211 | 310 | 25.6% | 7,709 | 3,157 | 41.0% |
| Unknown | 600 | 137 | 22.8% | 1,590 | 598 | 37.6% |
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| IPP clinic | 1,747 | 517 | 29.6% | 10,817 | 4,435 | 41.0% |
| Not IPP clinic | 4,226 | 989 | 23.4% | 28,409 | 13,177 | 46.4% |
aClinics that provided C. trachomatis outcome data.
ER, emergency room.
Medical providers’ use of patient delivered partner therapy within subgroups of patients during baseline and intervention periods.
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| 580 | 110 | 18.3% | 15.3–21.7 | 4,701 | 1,598 | 34.0% | 32.6–35.4 |
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| 14–19 y | 199 | 41 | 20.5% | 15.5–26.7 | 1,509 | 510 | 33.9% | 31.5–36.3 |
| 20–24 y | 205 | 41 | 19.1% | 14.2–25.2 | 1,851 | 652 | 35.2% | 33.0–37.4 |
| 25–29 y | 95 | 13 | 13.0% | 7.5–21.6 | 775 | 265 | 34.2% | 31.0–37.6 |
| 30–34 y | 50 | 10 | 19.2% | 10.3–33.0 | 299 | 104 | 34.8% | 32.2–37.5 |
| 35–44 y | 22 | 3 | 12.9% | 3.7–36.4 | 185 | 55 | 29.5% | 23.2–36.6 |
| >45 y | 6 | 0 | 0% | — | 67 | 9 | 13.3% | 6.9–24.0 |
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| White | 331 | 74 | 22.2% | 18.0–27.0 | 2,465 | 913 | 37.3% | 35.4–39.2 |
| Black | 55 | 6 | 10.0% | 4.3–21.5 | 446 | 101 | 22.7% | 19.0–26.8 |
| Native American | 14 | 4 | 29.0% | 9.8–60.5 | 96 | 36 | 37.4% | 28.2–47.6 |
| Asian | 18 | 2 | 10.8% | 2.2–38.9 | 143 | 65 | 45.5% | 37.4–53.8 |
| Other | 22 | 2 | 8.7% | 1.9–32.3 | 255 | 120 | 47.0% | 41.0–53.1 |
| Multiple | 16 | 3 | 17.7% | 4.8–47.8 | 102 | 40 | 39.5% | 30.4–49.4 |
| Unknown | 124 | 19 | 15.1% | 9.7–22.7 | 1,194 | 323 | 27.0% | 24.6–29.6 |
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| Hispanic | 140 | 31 | 21.5% | 15.4–29.2 | 958 | 418 | 43.9% | 40.7–47.1 |
| Non-Hispanic | 366 | 70 | 18.3% | 14.7–22.5 | 3,343 | 1,074 | 32.0% | 30.4–33.6 |
| Unknown | 74 | 9 | 12.4% | 6.5–22.3 | 400 | 106 | 26.7% | 22.6–31.2 |
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| Female | 456 | 104 | 22.6% | 19.0–26.6 | 3,704 | 1,437 | 39.2% | 37.6–40.8 |
| Male | 124 | 6 | 4.7% | 2.1–10.3 | 997 | 161 | 16.6% | 14.4–19.0 |
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| Chlamydia only | 515 | 106 | 19.8% | 16.6–23.4 | 4,333 | 1,523 | 35.2% | 33.8–36.6 |
| Gonorrhea only | 55 | 2 | 3.6% | 0.7–16.2 | 253 | 56 | 22.1% | 18.4–26.4 |
| Both | 21 | 2 | 8.8% | 1.8–33.3 | 115 | 19 | 16.0% | 10.4–23.9 |
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| Family planning | 170 | 49 | 28.7% | 22.3–36.1 | 1,198 | 640 | 53.5% | 50.7–56.3 |
| Women’s health | 51 | 12 | 23.9% | 13.9–37.9 | 454 | 212 | 47.4% | 42.8–52.0 |
| Private | 113 | 16 | 13.7% | 8.5–21.4 | 1,216 | 381 | 31.3% | 28.8–34.0 |
| ER/urgent care | 49 | 3 | 5.4% | 1.6–16.9 | 507 | 54 | 10.6% | 8.2–13.6 |
| Military | 16 | 2 | 10.7% | 2.0–41.8 | 329 | 47 | 14.3% | 10.9–18.5 |
| Other | 120 | 16 | 12.2% | 7.3–19.7 | 836 | 208 | 24.9% | 22.0–28.0 |
| Unknown | 61 | 12 | 19.3% | 11.1–31.5 | 161 | 56 | 35.3% | 28.2–43.1 |
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| IPP clinic | 214 | 59 | 26.9% | 21.4–33.2 | 1,457 | 728 | 49.9% | 47.4–52.5 |
| Not IPP clinic | 366 | 51 | 13.4% | 10.3–17.2 | 3,244 | 870 | 26.8% | 25.3–28.4 |
aEstimated based on interviews with randomly sampled, interviewed patients.
bConfidence interval accounts for weighting; computed on logit scale and backtransformed.
cThe magnitude of the intervention effect did not vary significantly for any of the subgroups defined in the table.
dClinics that provided C. trachomatis outcome data.
ER, emergency room.
Figure 4Trends in chlamydia test positivity and gonorrhea incidence for 2007–2010 among women in 23 local health jurisdictions in Washington State.
Chlamydia test positivity and gonorrhea incidence (A) across all waves and (B) by wave. Open symbols and red lines indicate measurement and time before the institution of the study intervention, and solid symbols and black lines represent intervention time periods. Time periods are 3-mo analysis periods occurring prior to initiation of the intervention in each wave.
Association of the study intervention with chlamydia test positivity and reported gonorrhea incidence in women.
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| Chlamydia positivity in women ages 14–25 y | 0.89 (0.77–1.04) | 0.15 |
| Reported gonorrhea incidence in women | 0.91 (0.71–1.16) | 0.45 |
| Combined chlamydia positivity and gonorrhea incidence | 0.90 (0.80–1.01) | 0.06 |