| Literature DB >> 31730666 |
Jocelyn Anstey Watkins1, Jonathan D C Ross2, Sukhwinder Thandi3, Clare Brittain3, Joe Kai4, Frances Griffiths1,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is associated with an elevated vaginal pH and the presence of abnormal offensive discharge. It is common, often recurrent, and the most effective treatment regimen is unknown. 'Metronidazole Versus lactic acId for Treating bacterial vAginosis' (VITA) is a UK-based randomised controlled trial assessing clinical and cost-effectiveness of topical lactic acid gel compared to oral metronidazole antibiotic for treating second and subsequent BV episodes. Few BV trials report on women's preferences for treatment in the context of their own experiences.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31730666 PMCID: PMC6857901 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0224964
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Related finding to the acceptability construct from the ‘acceptability of health interventions’ framework.
| Acceptability construct | Related finding |
|---|---|
| All women sampled, were by definition, willing to participate in the trial. | |
| Lactic acid gel—application once per day, at night was described as easy to apply to the site of the condition/ had a soothing effect to reduce itchiness/ was possibly messy/ application was restricted to night time/ administration was lying down. | |
| Metronidazole antibiotics—simple to take anywhere/ some side-effects of drugs/ concern of antibiotic resistance. | |
| Lactic acid gel requires effort: comfortably lying down; application only just before bedtime at night/ abstaining from sexual intercourse for the duration of treatment (may affect intervention) (easy to buy over-the-counter in pharmacies (even within supermarkets and online) yet unaffordable. | |
| Metronidazole antibiotics have probable side-effects such as nausea (yet no one described this); antibiotic tablets require abstaining from alcohol (may affect intervention); obtaining prescription for antibiotic tablets requires effort (GP appointment/ drop-in service at the GUM clinic = wait time/ stigma once there/ cost of travel); course of treatment is the same length of time: seven days. | |
| Both treatments require more effort than self-medicating with natural home remedies, because they have to be prescribed (physically go to the appointment) or to the pharmacy. | |
| The burden of taking treatment lactic acid gel or antibiotic tablets put some women off = withdraw from either treatment or chance symptoms go away naturally. | |
| The burden of treatment was not enough for any of the women to drop out or discontinue the medication during the trial (but a few forgot on one of the treatment days). | |
| All women were willing to give the intervention treatment a go, still willing to take it as an alternative despite the lactic acid gel not curing the symptoms of BV/or at least for only a short duration of time. | |
| All women were willing to try alternative treatments based on the impact BV is having on their lives/ psychosocial feelings they contended with because of the distressing symptomatology of the condition, particularly malodour and on having to take the antibiotics regularly within a period of time which made one woman feel ‘rubbish’. | |
| For both treatments: a change in behaviour/ lifestyle is required. | |
| For the lactic acid gel, women may need to abstain from sexual intercourse/ delay until the menstrual cycle bleed is finished | |
| For metronidazole antibiotics, women must abstain from drinking alcohol. | |
| For both treatments, all women adhered to treatment. | |
| All women were prepared to do whatever it takes to get on top of the BV, ‘keep it at bay’ and not succumb to the BV and forgo value systems in pursuit of purging BV for good. | |
| Taking antibiotics repetitively overtime was a concern for some women. | |
| Taking medication treatment was not against any of the women’s principles since their lives were being governed by the BV. | |
| The associated side-effects of the treatment were not going to be very different from anything they had experienced in the past, mostly they had all tried one or both treatments previously. |
Summary of women’s treatment preference based on differences between drug treatments.
| Women’s treatment preference depending on: | Metronidazole Antibiotics | Lactic Acid Gel |
|---|---|---|
| Severity of symptoms | Severe BV | Mild BV |
| How often drugs can be taken | Short-term treatment | Long-term treatment |
| Perceived speed of cure | Quick results (all cleared up) | Quick to mid-term results |
| Duration between perceived recurrence | Longer durations between episodes | Shorter duration between episodes |
| Perceived effectiveness | Know antibiotic tablets work better = strong form of treatment | Prefers using the lactic acid gel = less intense form of treatment |
| Drug option | First-line treatment on the first sign of ‘severe’ symptoms | First-line treatment on the first sign of ‘mild’ symptoms |
| Back-up drug (if lactic acid gel did not work the first time around) | Use in addition to antibiotic/ or straight after a course of antibiotic | |
| Description of treatment type | Last resort treatment | Substitute treatment/ precaution/ preventative treatment |