Recurrent/Intermittent Vaginal and Rectal Chlamydial Infection Following Treatment: A Prospective Cohort Study Among Female Sexually Transmitted Disease Clinic Patients

Author:

Khosropour Christine M1ORCID,Soge Olusegun O23,Suchland Robert2,Leipertz Gina1,Unutzer Anna1,Pascual Rushlenne3,Hybiske Kevin2ORCID,Barbee Lindley A24,Manhart Lisa E13,Dombrowski Julia C124,Golden Matthew R124

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology, University of Washington, Washington

2. Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Washington

3. Department of Global Health, University of Washington, Washington

4. HIV/STD Program, Public Health–Seattle & King County, Washington

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundRectal Chlamydia trachomatis (CT) is common among clinic-attending women, but little is known about clearance and health implications of rectal CT.MethodsAt the municipal sexually transmitted disease clinic in Seattle, Washington, in 2017–2018, we enrolled women at high risk for urogenital CT into an 8-week prospective study. Women received standard CT treatment at enrollment. Women self-collected daily rectal and vaginal specimens for nucleic acid amplification tests (NAATs) and completed weekly sexual exposure diaries. We performed CT culture on the enrollment rectal specimen.ResultsWe enrolled 50 women; 13 (26%) tested positive for vaginal (n = 11) and/or rectal (n = 11) CT. Sixty percent of women with rectal CT per NAAT were also culture positive. Median time to CT clearance after azithromycin treatment was 8.0 days for vaginal CT and 7.0 days for rectal CT. Eight women with rectal CT at enrollment had at least 1 rectal CT-positive NAAT after clearance of the initial infection; none reported anal sex.ConclusionsMost NAAT-positive rectal infections were culture positive, suggesting active infection. Time to NAAT clearance of rectal and genital tract CT was similar, and intermittent rectal CT positivity was common in the absence of anal sexual exposure. The cause of recurrent/intermittent rectal CT and the clinical implications of these infections require further study.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Colorado Clinical and Translational Science Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Immunology and Allergy

Reference33 articles.

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