| Literature DB >> 26405786 |
Limakatso Lebina1, Noah Taruberekera2, Minja Milovanovic1, Karin Hatzold3, Miriam Mhazo4, Cynthia Nhlapo4, Nkeko Tshabangu1, Mmatsie Manentsa1, Victoria Kazangarare4, Millicent Makola4, Scott Billy4, Neil Martinson5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The World Health Organisation and the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS have recommended the scale-up of Medical Male Circumcision (MMC) in countries with high HIV and low MMC prevalence. PrePex device circumcision is proposed as an alternate method for scaling up MMC.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26405786 PMCID: PMC4583405 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0138755
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow chart of total PrePex participants assessed, screened and enrolled.
A Total of 454 participants received information and 21 refused to participate. Among the 433 participants that were assessed for eligibility 35 (24 adults and 11 adolescents) were not suitable therefore a total of 398 (315 adults and 83 adolescents) participants were enrolled. We observed 8 adverse events in adults and 3 in adolescents.
Baseline Characteristics of PrePex Participants.
| Adult | Adolescent | |
|---|---|---|
|
| 315 | 83 |
|
| 26 (IQR:22–30) | 16 (IQR:15–16.5) |
|
| 2750 (IQR:0–4800) | |
|
| No education: 1% (2/295) | |
| Some Primary school: 3% (9/295) | ||
| Completed Primary school: 2% (5/295) | ||
| Grade 8–10: 19% (56/295) | ||
| Grade 11–12: 76% (223/295) | ||
|
| Zulu: 57% (167/294) | |
| SeSotho: 9% (25/294) | ||
| Swati: 6% (19/294) | ||
| Xhosa: 3% (8/294) | ||
|
| A: 9% (30/313) | A: 31% (25/82) |
| B: 30% (94/313) | B: 38% (31/82) | |
| C: 35% (108/313) | C: 16% (13/82) | |
| D: 19% (60/313) | D: 1% (1/82) | |
| E: 7% (21/313) | E: 2% (2/82) | |
| Other: 12% (10/82) | ||
|
| Size 14: 10% (1/10) | |
| Size 16: 20% (2/10) | ||
| Size 18: 40% (4/10) | ||
| Size 20: 30% (3/10) | ||
|
| 7 (IQR: 5–9) | 6 (IQR:5–9) |
Fig 2Pain during PrePex procedure.
Adult and adolescent participants had little or no pain during the placement procedure. However, during the removal procedure they experienced moderate to severe pain which abated rapidly and virtually no pain was reported 1 hour after removal.
Fig 3Kaplan Meier Survival Analysis of time to healing after application by adults and Adolescents.
At the day 42 (post-application) review, 15% (39/263) adults and 27% (19/70) adolescents were healed. Of the 171 adults who were assessed on day 56 review, 164 (96%) were considered healed. For adolescents, 91% (32/35) were healed on day 56 review.
Each moderate and serious adverse event with PrePex circumcision.
| Individual Adverse Event | Age Category | Days following Placement | Treatment | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Bleeding | Adult | 7 | Compression | Resolved |
| Infection | Adult | 28 | Oral Antibiotics | Resolved |
| Infection | Adult | 28 | Oral Antibiotics | Resolved |
| Displacement or self-removal | Adult | 2 | Surgical Circumcision | Resolved |
| Displacement or self-removal | Adult | 1 | Surgical Circumcision | Resolved |
| Wound Dehiscence | Adult | 18 | Dressings | Delayed wound healing |
| Obstruction to void with UTI Symptoms | Adult | 5 | Opening with forceps and antibiotics | Resolved |
| Displacement or self-removal | Adult | 0 | Surgical Circumcision | Resolved |
|
| ||||
| Infection | Adolescent | 17 | Antibiotics | Resolved |
| Bleeding | Adolescent | 9 | Compression | Resolved |
| Scrotal swelling and generalized oedema | Adolescent | 47 | Treatment from Urology Department at referral hospital | Resolved |