| Literature DB >> 30507962 |
Ricardo Niklas Werner1, Matthew Gaskins1, Alexander Nast1, Corinna Dressler1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Men who have sex with men (MSM) and who engage in condomless anal intercourse with casual partners are at high risk of acquiring sexually transmitted infections (STIs), but reliable epidemiological data are scarce. Studies on HIV pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) enrol MSM who indicate that they engage in behaviour that puts them at high risk of acquiring HIV. Because they also screen for STIs at regular intervals, these studies may serve as a valuable source to estimate incidence rates of STIs in this subpopulation of MSM.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30507962 PMCID: PMC6277101 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1PRISMA flow diagram.
Depicts the number of records identified, included and excluded, and the reasons for exclusions.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author, year (name of the study) | Population, geographic location, age in years | Type of study | Participants enrolled, follow-up | Safer sex counseling | Education / income | Alcohol and recreational drug consumption | Risk behaviour | STI at BL |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Grant et al. 2010 [ | MSM and transgender women at high risk for acquisition of HIV infection; | Parallel-group RCT | 2499 randomized; 3324 person-years; | Risk-reduction counseling, free condoms, STI screening and treatment | - less than secondary: 523/2499; | No. of alcoholic drinks (on days when subject drank): | No. of partners (past 12w): mean 18±43; | - serum HSV-2: 888/2484 (35.75%); |
| Hosek et al. 2013 [ | Young (18-22y) MSM with at least one episode of unprotected anal intercourse within the last 12 months; | partly double-blind parallel-group RCT | 68 pts. were enrolled, 58 randomized | Many Men, Many Voices (3MV) prevention intervention: risk-reduction counseling, free condoms, STI screening and treatment | High school diploma 18/58 (31.03%); | n.r. | Unprotected anal intercourse (past 30 days): 24/58 (41.38%); | syphilis: 5/58 (8.6%); |
| Molina et al. 2015 [ | MSM and transgender women with history of unprotected anal sex with at least two partners during the past 6 months; | double-blind parallel-group RCT | 414 pts. randomized, 400 followed; | Risk-reduction counselling (according to the RESPECT risk-reduction model), free condoms and gel, STI screening and treatment | Postsecondary education: 287/400 | >5 Alcoholic drinks per day in past month: 91/400; | median number of partners in past 2 m: 8; | Any STI: 111/400 (27.8%) |
| Gulick et al. 2017 [ | MSM or transgender women who had anal intercourse without a condom in the previous 90 days; | double-blind RCT | 406 pts. randomized, 343 (84%) completed | risk-reduction counseling, condom distribution, and HIV testing | less than high school: 3%; | n.r. | n.r. | 31 (8%) had an STI; |
| McCormack et al. 2016 [ | MSM who had anal intercourse without a condom in the previous 90 days; | open-label RCT | 523 contributed to HIV incidence analysis (both study groups); | Risk reduction interventions were offered according to routine practice at the clinic | 327/540 (61%) university graduates | 231/525 (44%): one or more drugs associated with sexual disinhibition (γ-hydroxybuty-rate, 4-methylmeth-cathinone, or methamphetamine) (past 90 days) | 21% of participants allocated to immediate PrEP reported receptive anal sex with ten or more partners without a condom at one year | 331/517 (64%) STI (previous 12m); |
| Bristow et al. 2018 [ | MSM and transgender women at risk for HIV; | cohort study | 394 participants; | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. |
| Cotte et al. 2018 [ | HIV- and HCV-negative MSM enrolled in a PrEP program; | cohort study | 930 HIV-negative MSM were enrolled for PrEP; follow-up was available for 916 of these, | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | 17 participants HCV infected at BL; prevalence 1.8%; 14 cured, 3 active HCV infection |
| Golub et al. 2016 [ | MSM and transgender women at risk for HIV acquisition; | cohort study | 280 began PrEP; | not reported | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | any STI: 31/280 (11.1%) |
| Grant et al. 2014 [ | MSM and transgender women at high risk for acquisition of HIV infection (from various PrEP trials); | cohort study | 1603 pts. were enrolled, among these 1128 started PreP at enrolment, 378 never started PreP and 97 started PreP after enrolment | Counselling targeted PrEP-adherence and -reporting; this involved counselling for sexual health | Less than secondary: 327/1590; | Alcohol use: | 519/1603 reported condomless receptive anal intercourse | Syphilis rapid plasma reagin positive: 253/1603; |
| Grinsztejn et al. 2018 [ | MSM and transgender women who reported one or more sexual risk criteria in the previous 12 months (eg, condomless anal sex with two or more partners, two or more episodes of anal sex with an HIV-infected partner, or history of STI diagnosis); | cohort study | 450 participants were enrolled, | Brief risk reduction counselling and a short adherence support session | Length of schooling, years | Binge drinking: 241/375 (64.3%); | ≥2 condomless anal sex partners in previous 12 months: 294/365 (80.5%); | Rectal chlamydia: 36/450 (8%); |
| Hoornenborg et al. 2018 [ | MSM and transgender persons who have sex with men, who were at least 18 years old and had one or more risk | cohort study | 376 participants were included in the analysis; for these participants median follow-up was 1.76py | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. |
| Hosek et al. 2017 [ | Young (18–22 years) MSM who reported HIV transmission risk behavior (eg, condomless anal intercourse, multiple sexual partners, or recent STI) in the last six months; | cohort study | 200 pts. were enrolled, and 58 prematurely discontinued; | Prevention services at each visit included risk reduction counseling, condoms, and an Integrated Next Step Counseling session. | completed some college: 45.5%; | n.r. | Average sex partners in previous month: 5; | 22% of pts. were diagnosed with an STI |
| Hosek et al. 2017 [ | Young (15–17 years) MSM who reported condomless anal intercourse with a partner of unknown or positive HIV serostatus, anal intercourse with at least three male partners, exchange sex, or sexually transmitted infection in the last six months; | cohort study | 78 pts. were enrolled, 72 (92%) began daily oral PrEP and 46 (64%) of these completed 48 weeks of follow-up | Evidence-based personalized cognitive counselling intervention to reduce sexual risk and comprehensive HIV prevention package (including HIV testing, sexual health and adherence promotion using Integrated Next Step Counselling, free condoms, and safety assessments) | Currently attending school: 56/78 (72%); | Alcohol consumption in the past month every week or more: 9/78 (12%); | Have been paid for sex (lifetime): 13/78 (17%); | 19 prevalent STIs were diagnosed in 14/78 pts (18%); |
| Lal et al. 2017 [ | MSM at risk of HIV infection (condomless receptive or insertive intercourse with an HIV seropositive person, receptive condomless anal intercourse with casual partners of unknown HIV status, or uncircumcised, condomless insertive anal intercourse with casual partners of unknown HIV status); | cohort study | 114 pts. were enrolled; STI data from 105 pts. were available at month 12; | Safer sex practices, including condom use, were recommended at each study visit | 64.1% had | n.r. | 97/114 had casual partners, with a mean of 19.2 anal sex acts in the past 3 months | 12.3% had a new STI diagnosis at baseline |
| Lalley-Chareczko et al. 2018 [ | Young (18–30 years) MSM and transgender women of colour; | cohort study | 50 participants enrolled; | Standard HIV prevention services including condom provision, risk reduction counseling, HIV testing, and STI screening and treatment | n.r. | Drug/alcohol use: 37/50 (74%) | HIV-positive partner: 4 (8%); | 6 / 50 (12%) tested positive for rectal chlamydia and/or gonorrhea |
| Liu et al. 2016 [ | MSM and transgender women who reported any of the following in the last 12 months: condomless anal sex with ≥2 male or transgender female partners; ≥2 episodes of anal sex with ≥1 HIV-infected partner; or sex with a male/transgender female partner and having a diagnosis of syphilis or rectal gonorrhea or chlamydia; | cohort study | 557 pts. enrolled, 437 pts. were retained in the study; | client-centered risk-reduction counseling, free condoms and lubricants, linkages to appropriate community services | High school or less: 55/437; | recreational drug use: 326/437; | mean number of anal sex partners (past 3 months): 10.9; | 147/557 (26.4%) had early syphilis, N. gonorrhoeae, or C. trachomatis at baseline |
| Marcus et al. 2016 [ | PrEP users (Kaiser Permanente NC members); | cohort study | 972 PrEP initiators; | adherence support | % without high school diploma in census block, mean (SD) | history of alcohol/drug abuse: 6.3% | n.s. | STI at baseline: 15.9% |
| Molina et al. 2017 [ | MSM and transgender women with history of unprotected anal sex with at least two partners during the past 6 months; | cohort study | 361 were enrolled; 63 (17%) prematurely discontinued; median follow-up time was 18.4 months (IQR 17.7–19.1); | Comprehensive package of prevention services, including face-to-face risk-reduction counselling done by a peer community member, and free condoms and gel. | Postsecondary school: 324/355 (91%); | Use of recreational drugs for sex: 157/356 (44%) | No. of partners in past 2 months: median 7 (IQR 3–15); | n.r. |
| Nguyen et al. 2018 [ | PrEP users, considered at high risk based on reporting at least one seropositive sexual partner with a detectable viral load, or engaging in condomless anal sex with multiple partners whose HIV status was unknown. | Retrospective cohort study | 109 participants; | n.r. | Education: | n.r. | Number of sexual partners within 12 months prior to PrEP: | n.r. |
| Noret et al. 2018 [ | MSM or transgender persons who reported having had condomless anal sex with at least 2 different partners over the last 6 months, and/or an STI over the last 12 months, and/or multiple courses of PEP within the prior 12 months, and/or use of chemsex. | cohort study | 1049 participants were enrolled; 887 (84.5%) were still under follow-up at the end of study; | Comprehensive package of prevention services including free condoms and gel and patient-centered counseling for risk reduction performed by a peer community member, to discuss the risks of HIV and other STIs. | Post-secondary education: 880 / 1043 (84.4%) | Use of chemsex in the last 4 weeks: 437 / 1027 (42.6%); | Number of partners in past 3 month: median: 10 (IQR: 5–10); | at least one bacterial STI at BL: 146 / 998 (14.6%); |
| Volk et al. 2015 [ | PrEP users (Kaiser Permanente SF members); | cohort study | 485 PrEP users; | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. | n.r. |
BL, baseline; FTC, emtricitabine; m, months; n.r., not reported / not assessed; No., number; PrEP, pre-exposure prophylaxis; PY, person-years; STI, sexually transmitted infection; TDF, tenofovir disoproxil fumarate; w, weeks; y, years; Comment: Data on incidence rates of STI in the study by Dr. J. Marcus were derived from data supplied in personal communication.
Evaluation of the quality criteria.
| Author / Year (Name of the study) | STI incidence data directly reported or easy to interpret | Robust screening methods for detection of STI | Large study size (> 500 person-years) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled RCTs | |||
| Grant et al. 2010 [ | + (syphilis) | + (syphilis) | + |
| Hosek et al. 2013 [ | - | + | - |
| Molina et al. 2015 [ | - (syphilis) | + (syphilis) | - |
| Double-blind, active-controlled RCT | |||
| Gulick et al. 2017 [ | - | + | - |
| Open-label, placebo-controlled RCT; STI incidence data derived from PrEP group only | |||
| McCormack et al. 2016 [ | + | + | - |
| Cohort studies of PrEP users | |||
| Bristow et al. 2018 [ | + | + | - |
| Cotte et al. 2018 [ | + | + | + |
| Golub et al. 2016 [ | + | + | - |
| Grant et al. 2014 [ | + | + | + |
| Grinsztejn et al. 2018 [ | - | - | - |
| Hoornenborg et al. 2018 [ | + (hepatitis C) | - | + |
| Hosek et al. 2017 [ | + | + | - |
| Hosek et al. 2017 [ | - | - (syphilis); | - |
| Lal et al. 2017 [ | + | + (syphilis) | - |
| Lalley-Chareczko et al. 2018 [ | - | + | - |
| Liu et al. 2016 [ | + | + | - |
| Marcus et al. 2016 [ | + | + | + |
| Molina et al. 2017 [ | + (hepatitis C) | + (gonorrhoea, chlamydia, syphilis) | + |
| Nguyen et al. 2018 [ | + | + | - |
| Noret et al. 2018 [ | + | - | - |
| Volk et al. 2015 [ | + | - | - |
+, quality criterion met; -, quality criterion not met
Fig 2Syphilis incidence rates by study type, higher quality data only (sensitivity analysis).
Incidence rates are given as events per 100 person-years. CI, confidence interval.
Fig 3Gonorrhoea of any anatomical localisation by study type.
Incidence rates are given as events per 100 person-years. CI, confidence interval.
Fig 4Chlamydia infections of any anatomical localisation by study type.
Incidence rates are given as events per 100 person-years. CI, confidence interval.
Fig 5Hepatitis C incidence rates by geography.
Incidence rates are given as events per 100 person-years. CI, confidence interval.