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Women Over 40 Face Doubled Trichomonas Vaginalis STD Risk Print E-mail
SciMed - Healthcare
TS-Si News Service   
Wednesday, 13 July 2011 09:00
Women Over 40 Face Doubled Trichomonas Vaginalis STD Risk.Quebec City, Canada. A Johns Hopkins infectious disease expert is calling for all sexually active American women age 40 and older to get tested for the parasite Trichomonas vaginalis.

New study evidence found that the sexually transmitted disease (STD) is more than twice as common in this age group than previously thought. Screening is especially important because in many cases there are no symptoms.


"We usually think of STDs as more prevalent in young people, but our study results clearly show that with trichomonas, while too many young people have it, even more, older women are infected," says senior study investigator Charlotte Gaydos, M.S., Dr.P.H. The study results were presented by Gaydos and her co-investigators at the 19th Biennial Conference of the International Society for Sexually Transmitted Diseases Research. The ISSTDR Conference abstracts are available as a supplement to the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections. [cf. Citation]

Trichomonas vaginalis.

Trichomonas vaginalis, a parasitic microorganism, is listed by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) as the most common STD in the United States.

An estimated 7.2 million men and women newly infected each year.

Internationally, the World Health Organization (WHO) estimates the annual rate of new infected people at 173 million.
Gaydos and her co-investigators show that among 7,593 U.S. women between the ages of 18 and 89, women 50 and older had the highest trichomonas infection rate, at 13 percent. Women in their 40s were next, at 11 percent. The study, which collected test samples from women in 28 states, is believed to be the largest and most in-depth analysis of the STD ever performed in the United States, complementing periodic national surveys of adolescents and individual city reports.

"Trichomonas infections are quite treatable with antibiotics," says Gaydos, a professor at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine." And these high numbers really warrant older women getting screened by their family physicians and gynecologists during routine check-ups to make sure they are not infected and are not inadvertently spreading it to others."

Overall, the survey results showed that 8.7 percent of all women tested positive for the STD. Previous estimates, using older, less reliable tests had indicated an overall infection rate of less than 4 percent. In the new study, the infection rate was 8.5 percent in women ages 18 and 19, dropping slightly to 8.3 percent for women in their 20s.

Gaydos says testing is needed to prevent transmission of the parasite because some infected women and most infected men show no signs of the disease, such as liquid discharge from the vagina or penis, irritation while urinating and genital itching. Left untreated, trichomoniasis can lead to severe health problems. Trichomonas infection is closely tied to co-infection with HIV, easing transmission of the virus that causes AIDS.

Trichomoniasis can also lead to inflammation of the vagina, urethra and cervix and to pelvic inflammatory disease. In pregnant women, the infection has been known to cause premature labor and result in more low-birth-weight babies.

The public health threat of trichomonas is compounded, Gaydos adds, by the fact that, unlike other common STDs, such as the bacteria Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, confirmed cases of parasitic trichomonas infection do not have to be reported to local public health officials and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

"What we are really witnessing with trichomonas, especially in older women, is that no one ever looked, no one ever tested and diagnosed, and no one is really getting treated, so the infection persists year after year," says Gaydos. She says that in addition to encouraging women to get tested, federal agencies should make trichomonas a reportable condition, as are chlamydia and gonorrhea, so that public health officials can screen, track and develop better methods to halt infections.

Among the study's other key findings were that infection rates were highest among black women of all ages, at 20 percent, almost twice what earlier estimates had suggested and more than three times the rate in whites, at 5.7 percent. Gaydos says this finding mirrors results of other health surveys tying increased STD infection rates — such as chlamydia and gonorrhea, too — to high levels of poverty, unemployment, and lack of education in different racial and ethnic groups.

Such social and economic disparities, she says, also help explain why the infection rate in jails, in which a large proportion of the prison population is African American, was 22.3 percent; and why women in the relatively poorer Southeast United States have the highest regional trichomonas infection rate, at 14.4 percent, whereas women in the more affluent Northeast had the lowest, at 4.3 percent.

"This survey information is vital to tailoring our efforts to get women, especially black women and women in jails, tested, diagnosed and treated," says Gaydos.

The Johns Hopkins team last December published survey results about trichomonas infection rates in men, in whom the disease is even harder to detect. Initial study data from 500 men tested for all three common STDs showed that at least 10 percent of all men participating in the study carried the parasite, whose infection can cause inflammation of the male reproductive organs. Solving the problem in men is also important, Gaydos says, because of the risk of re-infection and instances in which women and men have multiple sex partners and all will need treatment.

In the current study, test samples were collected from women in private clinics, emergency departments, hospitals, jails and community health STD clinics between July 1 and Dec. 30, 2010. Left over samples — consisting of either a urine, cervical or vaginal swab, or liquid pap smears, with the names removed — were then retested specifically for trichomonas, after they had already been clinically tested for chlamydia and gonorrhea. Researchers used the latest genetic assay, a test that is almost 100 percent foolproof in detecting trichomonas, instead of traditional testing methods, which are only accurate about half the time.

FundingFunding for the study was provided by participating academic centers, including the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. Testing supplies were provided free of charge to testing sites by the assay equipment manufacturer, Gen-Probe, of San Diego.

Gaydos has in the past received grant funding from Gen-Probe, but only for studies on the accuracy of their trichomonas assay, not this latest study.
SamplingSamples were collected from across the country, including from Arizona, California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Virginia, and Wisconsin.
ParticipationBesides Gaydos, other researchers from the Johns Hopkins University involved in these studies were Mathilda Barnes, M.S.; Mary Jett-Goheen, B.S.; Nicole Quinn, B.S.; Patricia Agreda, M.S.; Jeff Holden, M.A.; Laura Dize; Perry Barnes; Billie Masek, and Justin Hardick.

Additional research co-investigators were Christine Ginocchio, Ph.D., M.T., at North Shore University in Manhasset, N.Y.; Kimberle Chapin, M.D., at Rhode Island Hospital in Providence; and Jane Schwebke, M.D., at the University of Alabama in Birmingham.
CitationCharacteristics Of Women Testing Positive For Rectal STIs Using Self-Collected Mailed Specimens. J Ladd, Y H Hsieh, Mathilda Barnes, Patricia Agreda, Nicole Quinn, P Whittle, Mary Jett-Goheen, T Hogan, Charlotte Gaydos. 19th Biennial Conference of the International Society for Sexually Transmitted Diseases Research 2011; Session O1-S07.02.

The ISSTDR Conference abstracts are available in the journal Sexually Transmitted Infections 2011; 87(Suppl 1). doi:10.1136/sextrans-2011-050109.38
Download Abstracts eBook PDF
Abstract

Background. The website http://www.iwantthekit.org/ (IWTK) began offering self-administered rectal swab kits in addition to vaginal swab kits in January 2009 to test for Chlamydia trachomatis, Neisseria gonorrhoeae, and Trichomonas vaginalis.

Methods. Swab samples were collected at home by participants and sent by US mail and tested by NAAT (Gen-Probe) assays. Participants submitted separate questionnaires for the vaginal and rectal kits. Data were analysed by STATA, version 11.

Results. In 1084 questionnaires from women submitting vaginal swabs to the IWTK program since 2009, 194 (17.9%) reported anal intercourse (AI) in the last 90 days. Of these women, only 113 (58.2%) also ordered and returned rectal kits for testing. An additional 95 kits were ordered and returned by women who did not report recent AI (82), did not return a vaginal swab (5), or did not answer the AI question on the vaginal questionnaire (8). From a total of 406 rectal kits ordered by women overall, 208 (51.2%) were returned; three had no consent form; thus, 205 were tested. Of those tested, 26 (12.7%) were positive for chlamydia, 5 (2.4%) were positive for gonorrhoea, and 13 (6.3%) were positive for trichomoniasis. Two of these samples were positive for both Chlamydia and gonorrhoea, two for both chlamydia and trichomonas, and one for all three STIs. The total number of women testing positive for any rectal STI was 38 (18.5%), and 35 of these women also received and returned vaginal swabs, 34 of which were tested. Of those tested, 24 (70.5%) were positive for at least one of the three STIs vaginally, indicating that women who tested positive for rectal STIs were at very high risk for vaginal STIs. Of the 38 women with rectal STIs, the median age was 22 yr. and the median age of first rectal sex was 20 yr. Questionnaires demonstrated 93.6% were single, 62.5% were Black, and 21.9% were White. Of the women with rectal STIs, 67.7% reported no symptoms, 12.0% reported no rectal partners in previous yr, 56.0% reported one partner, and 32% reported 2e4 partners. Only 16.0% reported having a new rectal partner in the last 3 months. Half (50.0%) reported never using condoms, 15.4% reported they always used condoms, 15.4% reported using condoms most of the time, and 19.2% reported using condoms some of the time.

Conclusions. Public health officials should be aware that AI and rectal STIs are not uncommon among sexually active women. Future STI screening programs should consider rectal infections.

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Last Updated on Wednesday, 13 July 2011 09:08