| Literature DB >> 29856848 |
Evelyne Kestelyn1,2, Stephen Agaba1, Jennifer Ilo Van Nuil1,2, Mireille Uwineza1, Marie Michelle Umulisa1, Lambert Mwambarangwe1, Jean Claude Ndagijimana1, Irith De Baetselier3, Jozefien Buyze3, Thérèse Delvaux3, Tania Crucitti3, Vicky Jespers3, Janneke H H M van de Wijgert2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Contraceptive vaginal rings could play a role in expanding the contraceptive method mix and in preparing communities for the introduction of HIV prevention and multipurpose rings.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29856848 PMCID: PMC5983532 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197572
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Participant flow.
Baseline characteristics of the screened population and enrolled population by randomisation group.
| Baseline characteristics n (%) | Screened | Intermittent use (N = 60) | Continuous use (N = 60) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | n (%) | |||
| Age in years (median, IQR) | 347 | 28 (20–35) | 28 (26–31) | 29 (26–32) |
| Education: | ||||
| No schooling | 347 | 43 (12) | 9 (15) | 6 (10) |
| Primary school | 230 (66) | 39 (65) | 41 (68) | |
| Secondary school | 68 (20) | 10 (16) | 11 (18) | |
| More than secondary school | 6 (2) | 2 (3) | 2 (3) | |
| Earns own income | 289 | 170 (59) | 37 (62) | 34 (57) |
| Partnership: | ||||
| Married | 347 | 213 (61) | 37 (62) | 36 (60) |
| Not married but living together | 88 (25) | 16 (27) | 16 (27) | |
| Not married, regular partner but not living together | 42 (12) | 7 (12) | 8 (13) | |
| No regular partner | 4 (1) | 0 | 0 | |
| Had additional sex partners in last 3 months | 275 | 16 (6) | 2 (3) | 2 (3) |
| Lifetime sex partners: | ||||
| 1–3 | 289 | 233 (81) | 51 (85) | 53 (88) |
| 4 or more (range: 4–300) | 56 (19) | 9 (15) | 7 (12) | |
| Condom use in last three weeks | ||||
| Always | 288 | 42 (15) | 12 (20) | 9 (15) |
| Sometimes | 155 (54) | 24 (41) | 35 (58) | |
| Never | 91 (32) | 23 (38) | 16 (27) | |
| Used condom during last sex act | 289 | 113 (39) | 23 (38) | 23 (38) |
| Pregnancies: | ||||
| 0 | 289 | 8 (3) | 2 (3) | 3 (5) |
| 1 | 57 (20) | 12 (20) | 10 (17) | |
| 2 | 89 (31) | 22 (37) | 17 (28) | |
| 3 or more (range: 3–7) | 135 (47) | 24 (40) | 30 (50) | |
| Any vaginal deliveries | 289 | 244 (84) | 55 (92) | 51 (85) |
| Any Caesarean sections | 289 | 44 (15) | 6 (10) | 11 (18) |
| Any past contraceptive use | 289 | 180 (62) | 41 (68) | 38 (63) |
| Injectables | 289 | 134 (46) | 32 (53) | 27 (45) |
| Contraceptive pills | 289 | 64 (22) | 11 (18) | 18 (30) |
| Copper intra uterine device | 289 | 2 (1) | 1 (2) | 0 |
| Pregnancy test positive | 285 | 19 (7) | 0 | 0 |
| BV | 185 | 82 (44) | 24 (40) | 24 (41) |
| Nugent score 4–6 | 22 (12) | 7 (12) | 7 (12) | |
| Nugent score 7–10 | 81 (44) | 29 (48) | 28 (47) | |
| Yeasts on wet mount | 186 | 11 (6) | 2 (3) | 4 (7) |
| Trichomonads on wet mount | 186 | 13 (7) | 5 (8) | 4 (7) |
| HIV by algorithm | 285 | 59 (21) | 0 | 0 |
| HSV-2 serology | 285 | 149 (52) | 21 (35) | 26 (43) |
| Syphilis serology | 285 | 25 (9) | 3 (5) | 3 (5) |
| Chlamydia PCR | 186 | 15 (8) | 4 (7) | 6 (10) |
| Gonorrhoea PCR | 186 | 15 (8) | 2 (3) | 5 (8) |
BV = bacterial vaginosis; IQR = interquartile range; HIV = human immunodeficiency virus; HSV-2 = herpes simplex virus type 2; PCR = polymerase chain reaction.
1. 351 women initiated the screening process. Some of the eligibility criteria were assessed by structured questioning and others by clinical assessment or laboratory testing at either the screening and/or enrollment visit. When a woman was determined to be ineligible, screening procedures were usually not completed. This is why the data in the ‘Screened’ column of Table 1 were not always collected for all 351 women.
2. Includes women who had some primary schooling but did not complete it. The same applies to secondary schooling.
3. Enrolled women reported informal trade/small business (37/71), employment by tea or coffee company (15/71), cleaning/cooking (6/71), construction (3/71), hairdressing (2/71), and other (8/71). Nine enrolled women reported to have exchanged sex for money or goods in the past year.
4. Women could report more than one method.
5. One slide was unreadable for the randomised population.
Urogenital self-reported symptoms and clinician-observed signs (not associated with a laboratory-confirmed infection at the same visit) by randomisation group.
| Urogenital symptoms/signs recorded at baseline and ring removal visits | Baseline (N = 120) | Intermittent use of three rings (N = 60) | Continuous use of four rings (N = 60) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total n (%) of randomised women with symptom(s) or sign(s) at the baseline visit | 18 (15) | NA | NA | |
| Total n (%) of women with incident symptom(s) or sign(s) during at least one ring removal visit | NA | 11/60 (18.3) | 17/60 (28.3) | 0.280 |
| Burning when passing urine | 2 (1.7) | 1/59 (1.7) | 4/59 (6.8) | 0.364 |
| Genital burning | 1 (0.8) | 3/59 (5.1) | 2/60 (3.3) | 0.679 |
| Frequent urination or urgent need | 0 (0.0) | 1/60 (1.7) | 0/60 (0.0) | 1.000 |
| Genital itching | 2 (1.7) | 1/59 (1.7) | 2 /59 (3.4) | 1.000 |
| Lower abdominal pain | 3 (2.5) | 0/59 (0.0) | 6/58 (10.3) | 0.013 |
| Abnormal vaginal discharge | 1 (0.8) | 0/60 (0.0) | 0/59 (0.0) | |
| Pain during sex | 1 (0.8) | 0/59 (0.0) | 0/60 (0.0) | |
| Vulvovaginal lesion/pustule | 0 (0.0) | 1/60 (1.7) | 1/60 (1.7) | 1.000 |
| Vaginal abnormal/unusual discharge | 11 (9.2) | 3/56 (5.4) | 1/53 (1.9) | 0.619 |
| Vaginal erythema or ulceration or laceration or abrasion or peeling or petechiae or ecchymosis or condylomata or oedema or cysts | 0 (0.0) | 1/60 (1.7) | 0/60 (0.0) | 1.000 |
| Vaginal vesicles | 0 (0.0) | 0/60 (0.0) | 1/60 (1.7) | 1.000 |
| Cervical abnormal/unusual discharge | 1 (0.8) | 2/60 (3.3) | 0/59 (0.0) | 0.496 |
| Cervical erythema, ulceration, laceration, abrasion, peeling, petechiae, ecchymosis, vesicles, condylomata, oedema, cysts | 1 (0.8) | 0/59 (0.0) | 1/60 (1.7) | 1.000 |
| Cervical os blood present | 0 (0.0) | 3/60 (5.0) | 10/60 (16.7) | 0.075 |
| Adnexal tenderness | 1 (0.8) | 0/60 (0.0) | 0/59 (0.0) |
NA = not applicable
1. Number of women with incident self-reported symptom or clinician-observed sign at one or more ring removal visits (%).
2. Women could report one or more symptoms, and study physicians could observe one or more signs, per ring removal visit.
3. Includes self-reported urogenital and vaginal symptoms.
4. Fisher’s exact test comparing intermittent and continuous users.
Laboratory-confirmed bacterial vaginosis, vaginal yeasts and trichomoniasis by randomisation group.
| Incident infection between first ring insertion and last ring removal | Intermittent use of three rings | Continuous use of four rings | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bacterial vaginosis (Nugent 7–10) | 4 / 24 (16.7) | 8 / 24 (33.3) | 0.318 |
| Asymptomatic | 4 / 24 (16.7) | 7 / 24 (29.2) | 0.494 |
| Symptomatic | 0 / 24 (0.0) | 1 / 24 (4.2) | 1.000 |
| Vaginal yeasts (wet mount) | 13 / 58 (22.4) | 15 / 56 (26.8) | 0.666 |
| Asymptomatic | 12 / 58 (20.7) | 8 /56 (14.3) | 0.462 |
| Symptomatic | 1 / 58 (1.7) | 7 / 56 (12.5) | 0.031 |
| Trichomoniasis (wet mount) | 3 / 55 (5.5) | 4 /56 (7.1) | 1.000 |
| Asymptomatic | 2 / 55 (3.6) | 3 / 56 (5.4) | 1.000 |
| Symptomatic | 1 / 55 (1.8) | 1 / 56 (1.8) | 1.000 |
1. Number of women with positive test result at one or more ring removal visits / Number of women who were negative for that infection at baseline (%).
2. Fisher’s exact test.
3. To incident BV also applies: a Nugent score of 7–10 after a previous Nugent score of 0–6.
4. Symptomatic: woman reported a urogenital symptom(s), or clinician observed a urogenital sign(s), at the same visit as the positive laboratory test result.
Fig 2Mean Nugent score over time by randomisation group.
X-axis: RRV = ring removal visit.Y-axis: Mean Nugent score for intermittent users (solid line) and continuous users (dashed line) with bars indicating 95% confidence intervals. The mean Nugent score for the 60 women in each randomisation group was calculated at baseline and at each ring removal visit. The intermittent users used three rings and therefore had three ring removal visits, whereas the continuous users had four.
Spontaneously reported adverse events: comparison by group for the total ring use period and per 100 used rings.
| Adverse events | Total ring use period | Rate per 100 rings | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| At least one AE | 23 (38.3) | 32 (53.3) | 0.142 | 12.8 | 13.3 | 0.876 |
| One AE | 12 (20.0) | 11 (18.3) | 1.000 | 6.7 | 4.6 | 0.369 |
| Two AEs | 8 (13.3) | 10 (16.7) | 0.799 | 4.4 | 4.2 | 0.892 |
| Three AEs | 2 (3.3) | 9 (15.0) | 0.053 | 1.1 | 3.8 | 0.120 |
| Four AEs | 1 (1.7) | 1 (1.7) | 1.000 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.839 |
| Five AEs | 0 (0.0) | 1 (1.7) | 1.000 | 0.0 | 0.4 | NA |
| Mild | 13 (34.2) | 23 (34.3) | 1.000 | |||
| Moderate | 25 (65.8) | 44 (65.7) | ||||
| | 3 (7.9) | 7 (10.5) | 0.308 | |||
| | 16 (42.1) | 19 (28.4) | ||||
| | 18 (47.4) | 38 (56.7) | ||||
| | 1 (2.6) | 3 (4.5) | ||||
| | 0 (0.0) | 0 (0.0) | ||||
| Respiratory tract infection | 7 (11.7) | 4 (6.7) | 0.529 | 3.9 | 1.7 | 0.176 |
| Headache | 6 (10.0) | 11 (18.3) | 0.295 | 3.3 | 4.6 | 0.530 |
| Back pain | 3 (5.0) | 8 (13.3) | 0.204 | 1.7 | 3.3 | 0.306 |
| Menorrhagia | 2 (3.3) | 9 (15.0) | 0.053 | 1.1 | 3.8 | 0.120 |
| Diarrhoea | 1 (1.7) | 6 (10.0) | 0.114 | 0.6 | 2.5 | 0.164 |
| Malaria | 2 (3.3) | 4 (6.7) | 0.679 | 1.1 | 1.7 | 0.640 |
| Vaginal haemorrhage | 3 (5.0) | 1 (1.7) | 0.619 | 1.7 | 0.4 | 0.230 |
| Nausea | 0 (0.0) | 4 (6.7) | 0.119 | 0.0 | 1.7 | NA |
| Vertigo | 2 (3.3) | 5 (8.3) | 0.439 | 1.1 | 2.1 | 0.452 |
| Abdominal pain | 1 (1.7) | 3 (5.0) | 0.619 | 0.6 | 1.3 | 0.483 |
| Asthma | 1 (1.7) | 1 (1.7) | 1.000 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.839 |
| Wound | 1 (1.7) | 1 (1.7) | 1.000 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.839 |
| Pustule | 1 (1.7) | 1 (1.7) | 1.000 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.839 |
AE = adverse event. The combination of prolonged painful menses and lower abdominal pain is coded as menorrhagia. Painful menses, prolonged menses, and heavy menstrual flow are coded as menorrhagia. Lower abdominal pain is coded as abdominal pain. Vaginal bleeding and spotting are coded as vaginal haemorrhage. Amoebiasis and intestinal parasitosis are coded as diarrhoea. Cough, flu and tonsillitis are coded as respiratory tract infection. Dizziness is coded as vertigo. The combination of nausea and vomiting is coded as nausea.
1. AEs that are not captured under the structurally collected urogenital symptoms and signs, or laboratory confirmed reproductive tract infections, which were presented in Tables 2 and 3.
2. Number of women who reported the AE (%), unless indicated otherwise.
3. Numerator: number of women reporting AEs; denominator: number of women multiplied with three (180) for intermittent users and number of women multiplied with four (240) for continuous users.
4. Fisher’s exact test comparing the proportion of women in the intermittent versus continuous use group.
5. Fisher’s exact test comparing the proportions of total AEs that were mild versus moderate, or not related/unlikely related versus possibly/probably related between study groups.
6. Intermittent users: prolonged menses; Continuous users: back pain x2 and vertigo.
7. Single presence AEs in intermittent users: loss of appetite, fever, urine tract infection, and abscess leg; in continuous users: acne, breast pain, allergic rhinitis, muscle cramp and itching of the vulva.
8. Poisson regression comparing AE rates in each study group.