Affiliation:
1. Departments of Epidemiology
2. Medicine
3. Wake County Human Services, Raleigh, North Carolina
4. Microbiology & Immunology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Trichomonas vaginalis
infection is highly prevalent worldwide and is associated with poor birth outcomes and enhanced human immunodeficiency virus transmission. Traditional detection methods rely on microscopic examination of vaginal specimens (wet mount) and culture, which can be insensitive and time-consuming. More than 3,000 women attending two sexually transmitted disease clinics were enrolled in this cross-sectional study to evaluate urine-based PCR for detection of
T. vaginalis
using a combined reference standard of wet mount and culture from vaginal swab. The prevalence of trichomoniasis in the population was 16.7% (502 of 3,009 women) using the reference standard. PCR with urine combined with agarose gel-based detection was 66.9% sensitive and 98.3% specific compared to the reference standard. Detection of PCR products using an unlabeled enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) improved the sensitivity to 86.4%, but specificity fell to 86.1%. Using a digoxigenin-labeled ELISA for detection of amplified
T. vaginalis
DNA from urine, the sensitivity and specificity of the PCR improved to 90.8 and 93.4%, respectively, compared to wet mount or culture from vaginal swabs. For clinical research settings in which vaginal specimens are not available and culture conditions are not feasible, urine-based PCR-ELISA may be useful for the detection of trichomoniasis in women.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
57 articles.
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1. Trichomonas Vaginalis;Diagnostics to Pathogenomics of Sexually Transmitted Infections;2018-09-28
2. Incidence of sexually transmitted infections during pregnancy;PLOS ONE;2018-05-24
3. CLINICAL AND AETIOLOGICAL PATTERN OF VAGINAL DISCHARGE IN PATIENTS ATTENDING STD CLINIC OF A TERTIARY HOSPITAL;Journal of Evolution of Medical and Dental Sciences;2017-08-14
4. Protozoa;Infectious Diseases;2017
5. Protozoa from Other Body Sites;Diagnostic Medical Parasitology;2015-12-15