| Literature DB >> 34189177 |
Lucy C Donovan1, Christopher K Fairley2,3, Ei T Aung2,3, Michael W Traeger4,5, Edwina J Wright4,6,7, Mark A Stoové4,5, Eric P F Chow2,3,8.
Abstract
We aimed to estimate how often urethral gonorrhoea is symptomatic among men in the Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Expanded Victoria study. Eighty-seven percent of 213 cases of urethral gonorrhoea were symptomatic. Ensuring men with urethral gonorrhoea both recognize and present early for treatment is critical to reduce transmission.Entities:
Keywords: gonorrhoea; men who have sex with men; screening; sexually transmitted infection; urethritis
Year: 2021 PMID: 34189177 PMCID: PMC8231363 DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofab263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Forum Infect Dis ISSN: 2328-8957 Impact factor: 3.835
Characteristics of Participants With Urethral Gonorrhoea (N = 191)
| Characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Age (years), mean (standard derivation) | 36.0 (10.1) |
| Gender | |
| Male | 189 (99.0) |
| Transgender, Male | 1 (0.5) |
| Nonbinary/Gender Fluid | 1 (0.5) |
| Sex at Birth | |
| Male | 189 (99.0) |
| Female | 2 (1.0) |
| Sexuality | |
| Gay/Homosexual | 180 (94.2) |
| Bisexual | 9 (4.7) |
| Other | 2 (1.0) |
| Country of Birth | |
| Australia | 100 (52.4) |
| Overseas | 68 (35.6) |
| Missing | 23 (12.0) |
| Injecting Drug Use at Enrollment | |
| Yes | 17 (8.9) |
| No | 174 (91.1) |
| In the 3 Months Before Enrollment: | |
| 99 (51.8) | |
| >1 Episode of condomless insertive anal intercourse with a casual male partner with HIV or of unknown HIV status | 82 (42.9) |
| >1 Episode of anal intercourse without correct and consistent condom use (eg, condom slipped off or broke) | 59 (30.9) |
| Used methamphetamines | 36 (18.8) |
| 48 (25.1) |
Abbreviations: HIV, human immunodeficiency virus.
Characteristics of 225 Cases of Urethral Neisseria Gonorrhoeae in the PrEPX Study
| Characteristics | n/N | % (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| On Initial Presentation: | ||
| Urethral Symptoms Present | 176/225 | 78 (72–83) |
| Coinfected with urethral chlamydia* | 29/174 | 17 (11–23) |
| Typical urethral symptoms | 139/176 | 79 (72–84) |
| Other urethral symptoms† | 30/176 | 17 (12–23) |
| Urethral Symptoms Absent | 49/225 | 22 (17–28) |
| Coinfected with urethral chlamydia‡ | 6/48 | 13 (5–25) |
| Asymptomatic and treated on day | 7/49 | 14 (7–27) |
| Asymptomatic and not treated on day | 42/49 | 86 (72–93) |
| Known contact of gonorrhoea infection | 21/225 | 9 (6–14) |
| Initially Asymptomatic and Returned for Treatment | ||
| Returned to recruitment site for treatment | 37/42 | 88 (75–95) |
| Urethral symptoms absent | 16/37 | 43 (29–59) |
| Urethral symptoms present | 9/37 | 24 (13–40) |
| Data incomplete to determine symptoms | 12/37 | 32 (20–49) |
| Symptomatic at either presentation§ | 185/213 | 87 (82–91) |
Abbreviations: CI, confidence interval; PrEPX, Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis Expanded.
*Two men with urethral symptoms were not tested for urethral chlamydia and therefore were excluded for coinfection analysis.
†The data on the nature of the symptoms was missing for 7 participants.
‡One man who did not have urethral symptoms was not tested for urethral chlamydia and therefore was excluded for coinfection analysis.
§The denominator excluded 7 asymptomatic individuals who were treated on the day of testing (contacts of gonorrhoea) and 5 who did not return for treatment at the 5 recruitment sites.