Affiliation:
1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
2. Department of Pediatrics, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia
3. Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education, Oak Ridge, Tennessee
Abstract
ABSTRACT
Annual screening for
Chlamydia trachomatis
infection is currently recommended for sexually active women 15 to 25 years old and for women older than 25 if they have a new or multiple sex partners and have not used condoms during the previous 3 months. Annual screening for cervical abnormalities using the Pap smear has achieved a substantial reduction in morbidity and mortality from cervical cancer. Screening for
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
infection has likely contributed significantly to the reduction in the rates of gonococcal infection. The introduction of liquid Pap smear methods using exfoliated cervical cells presents an opportunity to screen for these three conditions using one specimen. We evaluated the preservation of
C. trachomatis
and
Neisseria gonorrhoeae
DNAs from ThinPrep liquid media (PreservCyt; Cytyc Corp., Boxborough, Mass.); tested the feasibility of using a clinical specimen of this medium for the detection of cytologic abnormalities,
C. trachomatis
, and
N. gonorrhoeae
; evaluated the agreement between ligase chain reaction (LCR) performed on PreservCyt and LCR performed on a cervical specimen; and compared the performance of LCR performed on PreservCyt to those of LCR performed on a cervical specimen, culture, PCR performed on a cervical specimen, on urine, and on a vaginal specimen (a multiple-site infection status standard), and transcription-mediated amplification (for
C. trachomatis
only) from 255 sexually active adolescent women. The agreement between LCR performed on PreservCyt and LCR from a cervical swab in LCx transport medium was high (for
C. trachomatis
, agreement = 0.97 and kappa = 0.92; for
N. gonorrhoeae
, agreement = 0.99 and kappa = 0.96). Test performances were similar for LCR-urine, LCR-cervix, and LCR-ThinPrep, with sensitivities from 93 to 99% for
C. trachomatis
and 81 to 83% for
N. gonorrhoeae
and specificities from 95.5 to 99% for
C. trachomatis
and 99.1 to 99.6% for
N. gonorrhoeae
using a PCR-based multiple-site infection status standard. This is the first study to examine the agreement between liquid cytologic media and multiple nucleic acid amplification tests for the detection of
C. trachomatis
and
N. gonorrhoeae
from patient samples. Cytologic fluid shows promise for simultaneous screening for cytologic abnormalities and sexually transmitted infections.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Cited by
41 articles.
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