| Literature DB >> 29560291 |
Faisal Akhtar1, Sabah Rehman2.
Abstract
Congenital syphilis is one of the preventable diseases caused by the gram-negative bacteria Treponema pallidum; yet, it imposes a serious global health and economic burden, with more than half of the cases resulting in serious adverse outcomes, including infant mortality. Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of syphilis is estimated at 3.6 million adjusted life years (DALYs) and around $309 million in medical costs. In 2006, an estimated 9.7 million children of age less than five years died in developing countries; almost four million were neonatal deaths. There were 3.2 million stillbirths globally, among whom 95% were in the developing countries. In sub-Saharan Africa, there is an estimated 2.7% (0.1%-10.3%) of pregnant women infected with syphilis, representing more than 900,000 pregnancies at risk each year. There were many non-specific and specific diagnostic tests used in the past, which required laboratory equipment and electricity, but there are many newer tests available now that provide rapid results with high sensitivity and specificity, e.g., the immunochromatographic strip (ICS) and rapid syphilis tests (RST). Early syphilis can be completely eliminated with a single injection of penicillin, which is readily available, cheap, and highly effective, and treating pregnant women with penicillin is 98% effective at preventing congenital syphilis. Targeting women at a high risk of having syphilis makes universal screening in antenatal programs the most efficacious way to prevent syphilis-associated morbidity and mortality. The potential for a program to prevent congenital syphilis in the perinatal, neonatal, and postnatal periods is evident. While considering resource allocation to child survival programs in areas where the prevalence of syphilis is high, officials need to include antenatal syphilis screening, using rapid tests and treatment at the first contact of the mother with the health care system. In countries like Zambia and other resource-limited settings, a same-day test and treatment with penicillin should be prioritized to achieve the goal of eliminating congenital syphilis. Eliminating MTCT of syphilis through screening and treatment in antenatal care (ANC) is highly cost-effective in a wide range of settings, especially in countries with a high prevalence.Entities:
Keywords: antenatal care; congenital syphilis; disease prevention; healthcare burden; healthcare cost reduction; healthcare policy; neonatal; prenatal care; prevention
Year: 2018 PMID: 29560291 PMCID: PMC5856412 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.2078
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Articles and their statistical relevance
SSA: Sub-Saharan Africa; DALY: disability-adjusted life year; ICS: immunochromatographic strip; RST: rapid syphilis test; dual-POC: dual nontreponemal/treponemal point-of-care test; ANC: antenatal care
| Title/Author | Main research Goals | Study Design | Primary Statistical findings | Conclusions |
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Antenatal Syphilis Screening Using Point-of-Care Testing in Sub-Saharan African Countries: A Cost-Effectiveness Analysis [ | To evaluate the cost-effectiveness and budget impact of antenatal syphilis screening for 43 countries in SSA and estimate the impact of universal screening on stillbirths, neonatal deaths, congenital syphilis, and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) averted. |
Decision analytic model:
Average cost/DALY averted in US $ (95% CI) Prevalence target rate (range) |
$11 ($5-$77) 0.038% (0.002%-0.113%) | Universal antenatal screening of pregnant women in clinics may reduce the annual number of stillbirths by up to 64,000, neonatal deaths by up to 25,000, and annual incidence of congenital syphilis by up to 32,000, and avert up to 2.6 million DALYs at an estimated annual direct medical cost of US$20.8 million. Use of ICS tests for antenatal syphilis screening is highly cost-effective in SSA. Substantial reduction in DALYs can be achieved at a relatively modest budget impact. In SSA, antenatal programs should expand access to syphilis screening using the ICS test. |
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Assessment of the impact of rapid syphilis tests on syphilis screening and treatment of pregnant women in Zambia [ | To evaluate the impact of rapid syphilis tests (RSTs) on syphilis testing and treatment in pregnant women in Kalomo District, Zambia. | Quasi-experimental evaluation design with baseline, midline, and end line comparisons. | The proportion of women screened improved from baseline (140/1365, 10.6%) to midline (976/1446, 67.5%), finally decreasing at end line (752/1337, 56.3%) (P b 0.001). No significant difference in the proportion of syphilis-seroreactive pregnant women who received 1 dose of penicillin before (1/2, 50%) or after (5/48, 10.4%; P = 0.199) | With RST scale-up in Zambia and other resource-limited settings, same-day test and treatment with penicillin should be prioritized to achieve the goal of eliminating congenital syphilis. |
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Cost-Effectiveness of a Dual Non-Treponemal/Treponemal Syphilis Point-of-Care Test to Prevent Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes in Sub-Saharan Africa [ | To compare the health and economic outcomes of dual nontreponemal/treponemal point-of-care test (Dual-POC) that simultaneously detects both nontreponemal and treponemal antibodies with existing syphilis tests/testing algorithms in a high prevalence setting. | N/A | N/A | The dual-POC test may help save cost in resource poor settings where disease prevalence (and loss to follow-up) is high, while substantially reducing overtreatment. |
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Effectiveness of interventions to improve screening for syphilis in pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis [ | To review the literature systematically to determine the effectiveness of screening interventions to prevent congenital syphilis and other adverse pregnancy outcomes. |
A systematic review and meta-analysis
Pooled RR (95% CI)
Perinatal death Stillbirth |
0.46 (0.26-0.82) 0.42 (0.19-0.93) | Interventions to improve the coverage and effect of screening programs for antenatal syphilis could reduce the syphilis-attributable incidence of stillbirth and perinatal death by 50%. |
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Estimating the Public Health Burden Associated with Adverse Pregnancy Outcomes Resulting from Syphilis Infection Across 43 Countries in Sub-Saharan Africa [ | To estimate the public health burden resulting from adverse pregnancy outcomes due to syphilis infection among pregnant women not screened for syphilis in 43 countries in sub-Saharan Africa. |
Looked at Annual no of live births based on a 2012 data reported by UN's Children Fund.
Calculated incidence (95% CI) of adverse outcomes
Stillbirth Neonatal death Low birth weight Congenital syphilis |
88,376 (60,854-121,713) 34,959 (23,330-50,076) 22,483 (0-98,847) 60,084 (29,073-112,414) | Substantial infant mortality and morbidity results from maternal syphilis infection concentrated in countries with low access to ANC or low rates of syphilis screening. |
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Syphilis-associated perinatal and infant mortality in rural Malawi [ | Compared with non-syphilitic women, those with active syphilis were more likely to experience stillbirths as well as the early and late neonatal deaths and even postnatal deaths of their children. |
Prospective study design
Univariate analysis-OR (95% CI)
Fetal loss Stillbirth Neonatal death Perinatal death Postnatal death Infant death |
8.81 (5.41-14.29) 11.01 (6.54-18.49) 4.5 (2.43-8.23) 8.36 (5.38-12.94) 2.41 (1.30-4.40) 3.29 (2.05-5.26) | The potential for a program to prevent congenital syphilis in the perinatal, neonatal, and postnatal periods is evident. In considering resource allocation to child survival programs in areas where the prevalence of syphilis is high, officials need to include antenatal syphilis screening, using rapid tests and treatment at the first contact of the mother with the health care system. |