What proportion of episodes of gonorrhoea and chlamydia becomes symptomatic?

Author:

Korenromp Eline L1,Sudaryo Mondastri K2,de Vlas Sake J1,Gray Ronald H3,Sewankambo Nelson K4,Serwadda David5,Wawer Maria J6,Habbema J Dik F1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands, and Netherlands Institute for Health Sciences (NIHES), The Netherlands, and University of Indonesia at Depok, Indonesia

3. Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health, Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, Baltimore, USA

4. Department of Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology Unit, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda

5. Institute of Public Health, Makerere University, Kampala, Uganda

6. Center for Population and Family Health, Columbia University School of Public Health, New York, USA

Abstract

The effectiveness of syndromic treatment as an STD control strategy depends on the proportion of episodes which become symptomatic; few studies have measured this directly. We estimated these proportions for gonorrhoea (NG) and chlamydia (CT), synthesizing data on the point prevalence of self-reported discharge and dysuria among infected cases in rural Uganda, the durations of symptoms, incubation period and asymptomatic episodes, and the effect of treatment on symptom duration. Estimated proportions of episodes that become symptomatic were 45% for males with NG, 11% for males with CT, 14% for females with NG and 6% for females with CT. This was on average 1.5-fold higher than symptom prevalence at cross-section among infected cases in this population. Estimates were sensitive to assumptions on the relative durations of asymptomatic and symptomatic episodes, but were invariably inconsistent with previous direct estimates based on a US cohort study. These results show that the probability of recognizing symptoms in NG and CT episodes varies between settings. In populations with low treatment rates like Uganda, these probabilities can be very low. Here, health education should have priority in STD management programmes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Pharmacology (medical),Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Dermatology

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