Last data update: Jun 11, 2024. (Total: 46992 publications since 2009)
Records 1-4 (of 4 Records) |
Query Trace: Batteiger BE [original query] |
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Where do people go for gonorrhea and chlamydia tests: A cross-sectional view of the central Indiana population, 2003-2014
Batteiger TA , Dixon BE , Wang J , Zhang Z , Tao G , Tong Y , Tu W , Hoover SA , Arno JN . Sex Transm Dis 2018 46 (2) 132-136 BACKGROUND: Despite major efforts to control their spread, reported sexually transmitted infections (STI) are increasing. Using data from a mid-sized Midwest metropolitan area, we examined the settings in which individuals are tested for gonorrhea and chlamydia in relation to demographics and test result to determine where interventions may best be focused. METHODS: A de-identified and integrated registry, containing records from all patients tested for an STI from 2003-2014, was created by combining data from a large health information exchange and the reporting district's STI Program located in Indianapolis, IN. Individual characteristics and visit settings where gonorrhea and chlamydia testing was performed were analyzed. RESULTS: We identified 298,946 individuals with 1,062,369 visits where testing occurred at least once between the ages of 13 and 44 years. Females were tested significantly more often than males and received testing more often in outpatient clinics whereas males were most often tested in the STI clinic. Individuals who utilized both STI and non-STI settings were more likely to have a positive test at an STI or ED visit (6.4% - 20.8%) than outpatient or inpatient setting (0.0-11.3%) (p<.0001). Test visits increased over the study period particularly in emergency departments, which showed a substantial increase in the number of positive test visits. CONCLUSIONS: The most frequent testing sites remain STI clinics for men and outpatient clinics for women. Yet, emergency departments are increasingly a source of testing and morbidity. This makes them a valuable target for public health interventions that could improve care and population health. |
An integrated surveillance system to examine testing, services, and outcomes for sexually transmitted diseases
Dixon BE , Tao G , Wang J , Tu W , Hoover S , Zhang Z , Batteiger TA , Arno JN . Stud Health Technol Inform 2017 245 361-365 Despite laws that require reporting of sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) to governmental health agencies, integrated surveillance of STDs remains challenging. Data and information about testing are fragmented from information on treatment and outcomes. To overcome this fragmentation, data from multiple electronic systems spanning clinical and public health environments were integrated to create an STD surveillance registry. Electronic health records, disease case records, and birth registry records were linked and then stored in a de-identified, secure server for use by health officials and researchers. The registry contains nearly 6 million tests for 628,138 individuals over a 12-year period. The registry supports efforts to understand the epidemiology of STDs as well as health services and outcomes for those diagnosed with STDs. Specialized disease registries hold promise for collaboration across clinical and public health domains to improve surveillance efforts, reduce health disparities, and increase prevention efforts at the local level. |
Genotype-Specific Concordance of Chlamydia trachomatis Genital Infection Within Heterosexual Partnerships.
Schillinger JA , Katz BP , Markowitz LE , Braslins PG , Shrier LA , Madico G , van der Pol B , Orr DP , Rice PA , Batteiger BE . Sex Transm Dis 2016 43 (12) 741-749 BACKGROUND: Sexual transmission rates of Chlamydia trachomatis (Ct) cannot be measured directly; however, the study of concordance of Ct infection in sexual partnerships (dyads) can help to illuminate factors influencing Ct transmission. METHODS: Heterosexual men and women with Ct infection and their sex partners were enrolled and partner-specific coital and behavioral data collected for the prior 30 days. Microbiological data included Ct culture, and nucleic acid amplification testing (NAAT), quantitative Ct polymerase chain reaction, and ompA genotyping. We measured Ct concordance in dyads and factors (correlates) associated with concordance. RESULTS: One hundred twenty-one women and 125 men formed 128 dyads. Overall, 72.9% of male partners of NAAT-positive women and 68.6% of female partners of NAAT-positive men were Ct-infected. Concordance was more common in dyads with culture-positive members (78.6% of male partners, 77% of female partners). Partners of women and men who were NAAT-positive only had lower concordance (33.3%, 46.4%, respectively). Women in concordant dyads had significantly higher median endocervical quantitative Ct polymerase chain reaction values (3,032) compared with CT-infected women in discordant dyads (1013 inclusion forming units DNA equivalents per mL; P < 0.01). Among 54 Ct-concordant dyads with ompA genotype data for both members, 96.2% had identical genotypes. CONCLUSIONS: Higher organism load appears associated with concordance among women. Same-genotype chlamydial concordance was high in sexual partnerships. No behavioral factors were sufficiently discriminating to guide partner services activities. Findings may help model coitus-specific transmission probabilities. © Copyright 2016 American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association |
Protective immunity to Chlamydia trachomatis genital infection: evidence from human studies
Batteiger BE , Xu F , Johnson RE , Rekart ML . J Infect Dis 2010 201 Suppl 2 S178-89 BACKGROUND: Some screening and treatment programs implemented to control Chlamydia trachomatis genital infections and their complications have shown initial reductions in infection prevalence, followed by increases to preprogram levels or higher. One hypothesis is that treatment shortens duration of infection, attenuates development of protective immunity, and thereby, increases risk of reinfection. METHODS: A literature review was undertaken to assess evidence supporting the concept of protective immunity, its characteristics, and its laboratory correlates in human chlamydial infection. The discussion is organized around key questions formulated in preparation for the Chlamydia Immunology and Control Expert Advisory Meeting held by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in April 2008. RESULTS: Definitive human studies are not available, but cross-sectional studies show that chlamydia prevalence,organism load, and concordance rates in couples decrease with age, and organism load is lower in those with repeat infections, supporting the concept of protective immunity. The protection appears partial and can be overcome after reexposure, similar to what has been found in rodent models of genital infection. No data are available to define the duration of infection required to confer a degree of immunity or the time course of immunity after resolution of untreated infection. In longitudinal studies involving African sex workers, a group presumed to have frequent and ongoing exposure to chlamydial infection, interferon-g production by peripheral blood mononuclear cells in response to chlamydial heat-shock protein 60 was associated with low risk of incident infection. In cross-sectional studies, relevant T helper 1-type responses were found in infected persons, paralleling the studies in animal models. CONCLUSIONS: The data support the concept that some degree of protective immunity against reinfection develops after human genital infection, although it appears, at best, to be partial. It is likely that factors besides population levels of immunity contribute to trends in prevalence observed in screening and treatment programs. Future studies of protective immunity in humans will require longitudinal follow-up of individuals and populations, frequent biological and behavioral sampling, and special cohorts to help control for exposure. |
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