Routine Pharyngeal Gonorrhea Test-of-Cure: Is It An Effective Cephalosporin-Resistant Gonorrhea Control Strategy?

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Tác giả: Laura H Bachmann, Lindley Barbee, Cortni Bardier, Jonathan Bell, Annika A Bergstrom, Jason Beverley, Stephanie E Cohen, Megan Coleman, Stephanie Devlin, Kellie Hall, Rachel Harold, Meya Harris, Rebekah Horowitz, Kevin Kamis, Renuka Khurana, Robert Kohn, Christie Mettenbrink, Masayo Nishiyama, Laura A S Quilter, Madeline Sankaran, Benjamin Takai, Corinne Velasquez, Karen A Wendel

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại: 940.4144 Military history of World War I

Thông tin xuất bản: United States : Sexually transmitted diseases , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 707121

 BACKGROUND: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends test-of-cure (TOC) for persons with pharyngeal gonorrhea (GC) 7-14 days after treatment. We investigated the yield and feasibility of routine pharyngeal GC TOC to detect treatment failures. METHODS: During May 2021-July 2022, four U.S. STD clinics implemented pharyngeal GC TOC. Sites collected demographic, clinical, and behavioral data on all treated pharyngeal GC and positive TOC cases. Cases were dispositioned with the suspected reason for positive TOC. To assess perceived feasibility, sites participated in qualitative interviews. RESULTS: During the study period, 1,968 pharyngeal GC infections were diagnosed. Among 1,829 treated cases, 97.3% (n = 1,777) received ceftriaxone and 45.7% (n = 836) returned for TOC, varying by site (range: 35.5%- 70.8%). Among those with TOC, 4.7% (n = 39) were positive by NAAT. Of these, 48.7% had culture attempted
  six positive TOC (15.4%) were also positive by culture. Most positive TOC (66.7%) were attributed to re-infection (n = 13) or false-positive results (n = 13). Six (15.4%) were treatment failures. Four failed recommended treatment and had a positive culture: two were susceptible to ceftriaxone and two did not have antimicrobial susceptibility results. Seven positive TOC (17.9%) had insufficient data to disposition. Sites perceived TOC to be feasible, though substantial resources were required.ConclusionRoutine pharyngeal GC TOC yielded 5% positivity, though treatment failure was rare (<
 1%), and no cases of cephalosporin-resistant GC were identified. Low TOC return rates, limited culture collection, and limited culture yield highlight challenges to determining the cause of a positive TOC and the limitations of TOC in identifying cephalosporin resistance.
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