Title
Prevention of sexually transmitted infections in urban communities (Peru PREVEN): A multicomponent community-randomised controlled trial
Date Issued
01 January 2012
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Holmes K.K.
Garnett G.P.
Hughes J.P.
Campos P.E.
Whittington W.L.H.
Publisher(s)
Elsevier B.V.
Abstract
Background: Previous community-randomised trials of interventions to control sexually transmitted infections (STIs) have involved rural settings, were rarely multicomponent, and had varying results. We aimed to assess the effect of a multicomponent intervention on curable STIs in urban young adults and female sex workers (FSWs). Methods: In this community-randomised trial, baseline STI screening was done between August, and November, 2002, in random household samples of young adults (aged 18-29 years) and in FSWs in Peruvian cities with more than 50 000 inhabitants. Geographically separate cities were selected, matched into pairs, and randomly allocated to intervention or control groups with an S-PLUS program. Follow-up surveys of random samples were done after 2 years and 3 years. The intervention comprised four modalities: strengthened STI syndromic management by pharmacy workers and clinicians; mobile-team outreach to FSWs for STI screening and pathogen-specific treatment; periodic presumptive treatment of FSWs for trichomoniasis; and condom promotion for FSWs and the general population. Individuals in control cities received standard care. The composite primary endpoint was infection of young adults with Chlamydia trachomatis, Trichomonas vaginalis, or Neisseria gonorrhoeae, or syphilis seroreactivity. Laboratory workers and the data analyst were masked, but fieldworkers, the Peruvian study team, and participants in the outcome surveys were not. All analyses were done by intention to treat. This trial is registered, ISRCTN43722548. Findings: We did baseline surveys of 15 261 young adults in 24 Peruvian cities. Of those, 20 geographically separate cities were matched into pairs, in each of which one city was assigned to intervention and the other to standard of care. In the 2006 follow-up survey, data for the composite primary outcome were available for 12 930 young adults. We report a non-significant reduction in prevalence of STIs in young adults, adjusted for baseline prevalence, in intervention cities compared with control cities (relative risk 0·84, 95 CI 0·69-1·02; p=0·096). In subgroup analyses, significant reductions were noted in intervention cities in young adult women and FSWs. Interpretation: Syndromic management of STIs, mobile-team outreach to FSWs, presumptive treatment for trichomoniasis in FSWs, and condom promotion might reduce the composite prevalence of any of the four curable STIs investigated in this trial. Funding: Wellcome Trust and Burroughs Wellcome Fund, National Institutes of Health, Center for AIDS Research, CIPRA, and USAID-Peru. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd.
Start page
1120
End page
1128
Volume
379
Issue
9821
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Ciencias socio biomédicas (planificación familiar, salud sexual, efectos polÃticos y sociales de la investigación biomédica)
Salud pública, Salud ambiental
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84859105492
PubMed ID
Source
The Lancet
ISSN of the container
01406736
Sponsor(s)
This research was supported by the Wellcome Trust-Burroughs Wellcome Fund Infectious Disease Initiative 059131/Z/99/Z, 078835/Z/05/Z, and 078835/Z/05/B; National Institutes of Health NIAID STD Cooperative Research Center AI31448, Center for AIDS Research AI27757, and CIPRA U19 AI053218; and USAID-Peru. We thank the Peruvian Ministry of Health for participation in local health directorates; the National HIV/STI Program; the General Directorates of People's Health and of Epidemiology; the National Institute of Health of Peru; the National Institute of Statistics and Informatics); and local clinicians, counsellors, and laboratory personnel. We also thank the hundreds of members of the PREVEN network: pharmacy workers, midwives, physicians, trainers, and salespersons in charge of training of clinicians and pharmacy workers; members of mobile teams providing outreach to FSWs; survey interviewers; the US Naval Medical Research Center Detachment in Lima; the UPCH Research and Development Laboratories for valuable support in laboratory activities; Robert Coombs (University of Washington) for confirmatory testing of HIV western blot assays; and participants in the surveys and the intervention trial.
Sources of information:
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