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Paper Title

RepeatedChlamydia trachomatisGenital Infections in Adolescent Women

Keywords

  • chlamydia trachomatis
  • repeated infections
  • reinfection
  • antibiotic treatment failure
  • adolescent sexual health
  • sexually transmitted infections (stis)
  • partner notification
  • male screening
  • antibiotic effectiveness
  • genotype determination
  • amplification testing
  • treatment outcome
  • condom use
  • behavioral risk factors
  • cohort study
  • infection recurrence
  • sti prevention
  • public health interventions
  • youth sexual behavior
  • treatment adherence
  • sexual risk-taking
  • pelvic inflammatory disease
  • longitudinal study
  • partner-specific coitus
  • event-specific condom use

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 201 | Issue : 1 | Page No : 42–51

Published On

January, 2010

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Abstract

BackgroundRepeated Chlamydia trachomatis infections are common among young sexually active women. The relative frequency of reinfection and antibiotic treatment failure is undefined MethodsAdolescent women enrolled in a longitudinal cohort had behavioral and sexually transmitted infection assessments performed every 3 months, including amplification tests for C. trachomatis, ompA genotyping, and interviews and diary entries to document sex partner-specific coitus and event-specific condom use. Repeated infections were classified as reinfection or treatment failure by use of an algorithm. All infections for which treatment outcomes were known were used to estimate the effectiveness of antibiotic use ResultsWe observed 478 episodes of infection among 210 study participants; 176 women remained uninfected. The incidence rate was 34 episodes/100 woman-years. Of the women who were infected, 121 experienced ⩾1 repeated infections, forming 268 episode pairs; 183 pairs had complete data available and were classified using the algorithm. Of the repeated infections, 84.2% were definite, probable, or possible reinfections; 13.7% were probable or possible treatment failures; and 2.2% persisted without documented treatment. For 318 evaluable infections, we estimated 92.2% effectiveness of antibiotic use ConclusionsMost repeated chlamydial infections in this high-incidence cohort were reinfections, but repeated infections resulting from treatment failures occurred as well. Our results have implications for male screening and partner notification programs and suggest the need for improved antibiotic therapies

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