| Literature DB >> 25990095 |
Eileen Stillwaggon1, Larry Sawers2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The extraordinarily high incidence of HIV in sub-Saharan Africa led to the search for cofactor infections that could explain the high rates of transmission in the region. Genital inflammation and lesions caused by sexually transmitted infections (STIs) were a probable mechanism, and numerous observational studies indicated several STI cofactors. Nine out of the ten randomized controlled trials (RCTs), however, failed to demonstrate that treating STIs could lower HIV incidence. We evaluate all 10 trials to determine if their design permits the conclusion, widely believed, that STI treatment is ineffective in reducing HIV incidence. DISCUSSION: Examination of the trials reveals critical methodological problems sufficient to account for statistically insignificant outcomes in nine of the ten trials. Shortcomings of the trials include weak exposure contrast, confounding, non-differential misclassification, contamination and effect modification, all of which consistently bias the results toward the null. In any future STI-HIV trial, ethical considerations will again require weak exposure contrast. The complexity posed by HIV transmission in the genital microbial environment means that any future STI-HIV trial will face confounding, non-differential misclassification and effect modification. As a result, it is unlikely that additional trials would be able to answer the question of whether STI control reduces HIV incidence.Entities:
Keywords: AIDS; HIV; RCT; STI; randomized controlled trial; sexually transmitted disease and HIV; sub-Saharan Africa
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25990095 PMCID: PMC4438085 DOI: 10.7448/IAS.18.1.19844
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int AIDS Soc ISSN: 1758-2652 Impact factor: 5.396
Description of STI-HIV trials
| Name of trial | Treatment-arm interventions | Control-arm interventions |
|---|---|---|
| –Efforts to improve delivery of STI treatment services, including establishment of STI reference clinic, training health centre staff, supervisory visits to clinics, stocking clinics with STI drugs and providing information on STIs to the community | ||
| –A and B communities: information, education and communication activities | –Community development activities (such as technical help and supervision for self-support and for-profit groups) and general health-related activities (such as home-based care for the elderly and health promotion seminars) | |
| –Peer education and condom distribution among female sex workers and male clients funded by microfinance projects | ||
| –Presumptive treatment with azithromycin, ciprofloxacin and metronidazole | –Those reporting STI symptoms referred for free treatment in mobile clinics providing general health care in the village at the time of the visit | |
| –Presumptive treatment with azithromycin, cefixime and metronidazole by project staff | –Symptomatic bacterial STIs treated syndromically at time of survey by project staff | |
| –Monthly clinic visits with examination, testing for STIs and syndromic treatment | –Monthly clinic visits with examination for STIs if reporting vaginal discharge, abdominal pain or genital ulcer | |
| –Monthly doses of azithromycin | –Monthly placebos | |
| –Daily doses of acyclovir | –Daily placebos | |
| –Daily doses of acyclovir | –Daily placebos | |
| –Daily doses of acyclovir | –Daily placebos | |
In the literature, the trials are referred to in a variety of ways, according to the lead author, the site of the trial or the interventions. We use a uniform, geographic designation to identify the trials.
Trial included men who have sex with men in Peru and the United States, who fall outside the purview of this article.
STI, sexually transmitted infection.