Prevalence of five curable sexually transmitted infections among women in Lower River Region of The Gambia

Author:

Butcher Robert1,Jarju Sheikh2,Obayemi Dolapo2,Bashorun Adedapo Olufemi2,Vasileva Hristina1,Bransbury-Hare Hannah1,Agboghoroma Orighomisan2,Drammeh Lamin2,Holland Martin1,Harding-Esch Emma1,Clarke Ed1

Affiliation:

1. London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine

2. MRC Unit the Gambia

Abstract

Abstract Background The prevalence of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) in sub-Saharan Africa is poorly described. We aimed to determine the prevalence of five curable STIs (Chlamydia trachomatis [CT], Neisseria gonorrhoeae [NG], Trichomonas vaginalis [TV], Mycoplasma genitalium [MG], Treponema pallidum [TP]) in a sample of Gambian women from the general population. Methods Archived specimens from 420 women aged 15 − 69 years living in The Gambia enrolled in a clinical trial of human papilloma virus vaccine schedules were tested in this study. Urine samples were tested for CT, NG, TV and MG using a commercially available, open-platform multiplex PCR kit. A fragment of the ompA gene was amplified from CT-positive samples and sequenced. Serum samples were tested for TP using the Chembio DPP Syphilis Screen and Confirm test. Results Overall, 41/420 (9.8%) women had at least one STI. 32 (7.6%), 9 (2.1%), 1 (0.2%), 1 (0.2%) and 0 (0.0%) were infected with TV, CT, NG, MG and TP, respectively. ompA gene sequence was available from five CT infections: four were genovar D and one was genovar G. Conclusions STIs are endemic in The Gambia. Monitoring systems should be established.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference51 articles.

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4. Public Health England. Sexually transmitted infections and screening for chlamydia in England, 2020: The annual official statistics data release [Internet]. Vol. GOV-9494. 2020.

5. Prevalence of sexually transmitted infections and bacterial vaginosis among women in sub-Saharan Africa: An individual participant data meta-analysis of 18 HIV prevention studies;Torrone EA;PLoS Med,2018

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