| Literature DB >> 30587234 |
Jennifer Pillay1, Ainsley Moore2, Prinon Rahman3, Gabriel Lewin4, Donna Reynolds5, John Riva2, Guyléne Thériault6, Brett Thombs7, Brenda Wilson8, Joan Robinson9, Amanda Ramdyal2, Geneviéve Cadieux10, Robin Featherstone11, Anne N Burchell12, Jo-Anne Dillon13, Ameeta Singh14, Tom Wong15, Marion Doull3, Greg Traversy3, Susan Courage3, Tara MacGregor11, Cydney Johnson11, Ben Vandermeer11, Lisa Hartling11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae are the most commonly reported sexually transmitted infections in Canada. Existing national guidance on screening for these infections was not based on a systematic review, and recommendations as well as implementation considerations (e.g., population groups, testing and case management) should be explicit and reflect the quality of evidence. The aim of this systematic review is to synthesize research on screening for these infections in sexually active individuals within primary care. We will also review evidence on how people weigh the relative importance of the potential outcomes from screening, rated as most important by the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care (CTFPHC) with input from patients and stakeholders.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydia; Gonorrhea; Guideline; Screening; Sexually transmitted infections; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30587234 PMCID: PMC6307186 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0904-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Analytical framework
Eligibility criteria using PICOTS for Key Questions 1 and 2: Effectiveness and comparative effectiveness of screening approaches
| Criteria | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | ▪ Studies focusing on pregnant females | |
| Intervention | • If focus is on re-testing/screening or testing partners | |
| Comparator | ||
| Outcomes |
| |
| Timing | ▪ Follow-up duration: Any duration, with exception of infection transmission and repeat infection (both ≥3 months), and as defined for outcomes of incidence of chronic pelvic pain (≥6 months) and infertility (≥12 months | |
| Setting | ▪ Any setting (indirectness to primary health care will be considered for studies where participant recruitment/identification strategy is undertaken in non-health care settings, but not criteria for inclusion) | |
| Study Design | ▪ RCTs | ▪ Studies only published/available as conference proceedings or other gray literature (e.g., trial registry sites, government reports), unless information on study design (e.g., eligibility criteria, intervention and population description) is available (accessible online or via author contact) and sufficient for assessing quality/risk of bias. |
| Language | ▪ English | ▪ Non-English/French articles |
*An explanation of the process for rating outcomes for inclusion is in the text below Table 2
**Results in death or is life-threatening (i.e., requires inpatient hospitalization or results in prolongation of existing hospitalization; results in persistent or significant disability/incapacity; is a congenital anomaly/birth defect; is a medically important event or reaction) see https://www.ich.org/products/guidelines/efficacy/efficacy-single/article/clinical-safety-data-management-definitions-and-standards-for-expedited-reporting.html
Eligibility criteria using PICOTS for Key Question 3: Outcome valuation
| Criteria | Inclusion | Exclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Non-pregnant sexually active individuals* | ▪ Pregnant women |
| Exposure | Experience with any screening program for chlamydia and/or gonorrhea; experience with infection or outcomes of interest; exposure to scenarios about screening process and possible outcomes of screening (benefits and harms) | |
| Comparison | Depending on study design, comparator may be no screening or another form of screening, or the study may not have a comparator. When only one arm (e.g. screening) of a comparative study is included in the assessment of patient preferences, this study will be classified as a non-comparative study. | |
| Outcomes | • Utilities/health state valuations | |
| Timing | ▪ Follow-up duration: any or none | |
| Setting | ▪ Any setting | |
| Study Design | ▪ Any experimental or qualitative study design (e.g., stated and revealed preference studies [e.g. contingent analysis or valuation studies including discrete choice experiments, willingness to pay], studies directly [e.g., time-trade-off, standard gamble] or indirectly [mapping of health status instruments to quality of life scale] measuring health-state utility weights, surveys, qualitative studies) | ▪ Studies only published/available as conference proceedings or other gray literature (e.g., government reports), unless information on study design (e.g., eligibility criteria, participant characteristics, presentation of scenarios) is available (accessible online or via author contact) and sufficient to assess methodological quality. |
| Language | ▪ English | ▪ Non- English/French articles |
*Studies that are reporting on health state values for people with experience of the outcomes of interest (e.g., PID) that may have been caused by another infectious source do not have to only include sexually active individuals