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Sexually Transmitted Infections and Reproductive Health Morbidity in a Cohort of Female Sex Workers Screened for a Microbicide Feasibility Study in Nellore, India
Short Summary: Four-month placebo vaginal gel trial conducted to determine the feasibility of recruiting FSWs for future Phase 2/3 microbicide trials. RH morbidity and HIV and STI prevalence are reported. Women constitute 38% of India’s 2.4 million HIV-infected persons. Microbicides are potential HI...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
Publicado: |
Canadian Center of Science and Education
2013
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4776826/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23618483 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v5n3p139 |
Sumario: | Short Summary: Four-month placebo vaginal gel trial conducted to determine the feasibility of recruiting FSWs for future Phase 2/3 microbicide trials. RH morbidity and HIV and STI prevalence are reported. Women constitute 38% of India’s 2.4 million HIV-infected persons. Microbicides are potential HIV-prevention products currently undergoing clinical trials for efficacy. A four-month placebo vaginal gel trial was conducted in Nellore, India to determine the feasibility of recruiting a suitable cohort of female sex workers (FSWs) for a future vaginal microbicide efficacy trial. We report on the HIV and STI prevalence and reproductive health (RH) morbidity of FSWs screened for the trial. Results: 529 FSWs completed screening procedures; of those 33.6% were found ineligible. The mean age was 30.9 years; 68.6% women were married and 57.5% were home-based FSWs. Self-reported symptoms included abnormal vaginal discharge (31.6%), genital itching (3.4%), uterine mass/prolapse (3%) and painful intercourse (2.6%). Gynecological surgery was reported by 73.2% of participants; of those 10.5% had undergone a hysterectomy. Female sterilization was the most commonly reported contraceptive method. Pelvic examination showed vaginal discharge (50.7%), cervical discharge (5.3%), uterine/vaginal wall prolapse (2.6%), and cervical mass/nodule/vesicles/genital warts (4.2%). Common epithelial findings included erythema (79.1%) and vesicles/bullae (6%); 46% of participants had Papanicolaou tests graded as inflammatory and 1.1% as malignant. HSV-2 was the mostly commonly detected STI (60.7%) followed by trichomoniasis (15.5%), HIV (5.3%), syphilis (2.8%), chlamydia (2.2%) and gonorrhoea (0.7%). RTIs were more common: bacterial vaginosis (27.8%) and candidiasis (18.9%). Conclusions: The low HIV prevalence and high RH morbidity in the population makes this site unsuitable for a future phase 2 or 3 microbicide efficacy trial. HIV prevention programs targeting this population should include access to RH services. |
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