Title: Guidelines for STI surveillance
1Guidelines for STI surveillance
- UNAIDS/WHO Working Group on Global HIV/AIDS and
STI Surveillance
2STIs 333 million curable cases/year
- major causes of acute illness
- may lead to infertility
- can impose long term disability
- have psychological consequences
- may result in death
3Estimated new cases of curable STD among adults,
1995
Eastern Europe and Central Asia 18 million
North America 14 million
Western Europe 16 million
East Asia Pacific 23 million
North Africa Middle East 10 million
South South-East Asia 150 million
Sub-Saharan Africa 65 million
Latin America The Caribbean 36 million
Australasia 1 million
Global total 333 million
gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection, syphilis and
trichomoniasis
4STI Surveillance Components
- 1 - Case reporting
- 2 - Prevalence assessment and monitoring
- 3 - Assessment of STI syndrome etiologies
- 4 - Antimicrobial resistance monitoring
- 5 - Special STI surveillance-related studies
- 6 - Evaluation
5Case Reporting
- The type of case reporting used depends on the
availability of laboratory tests in clinical
care. - Types and formats of case reporting
- Syndromic vs. Etiologic
- Universal vs. Sentinel
-
6Objectives of case-reporting
- asses disease burden
- monitor trends in incidence
- provide information useful in programme planning
and management - provides info required for patient and partner
management - provide data necessary for managing health
services
7Data Elements
- Core data elements
- Diagnosis
- Reporting site
- Date of visit
- Gender
- Age group or age
- Additional data (residence, treatment,...) may
also be collected
8Syndromic case-Reporting
- Practical to establish
- No need of laboratory facilities
- Can be performed at any level
- Provides information to
- Assess disease burden,
- monitor trends in incidence,
- assist in programme planning and management
- plan and manage delivery of health services
- LIMITATIONS
- Only urethral discharge and genital ulcer disease
(non-vesicular) are potentially useful for
monitoring trends in STD incidence - Provides poor assessment of disease burden and
trends in women - Syndromes are not pathogen specific
9Syndromic Management
- uses no laboratory diagnostic tests
- uses flow charts as a basis for diagnosis and
treatment - provides treatment for diagnosis with multiple
causative agents - syndromic reporting fits in the context of
management
10Etiologic Case-Reporting
- requires well-developed systems of laboratory
diagnosis incorporated into routine STD clinical
care - requires diagnosis based on laboratory testing
- LIMITATIONS
- Many STIs are not useful for monitoring trends in
incidence - More useful for monitoring trends in STI
incidence in men as compared to women - Availability of diagnostic tests does not assure
quality
11Universal Case-Reporting
- Provides a minimum estimate of population based
STI incidence - Advantage
- Good for reporting ongoing information on the
capacity of health care providers to report STIs
12Sentinel Case-Reporting
- Purposes include
- assessment proportion of clinic attendees with
STI compared with other conditions - determination of STI distribution seen at clinics
- assessment of trends in numbers of cases at
sentinel sites, as a possible indication of
trends in disease burden in the community
13Sentinel-Case Reporting
- Disadvantages
- cannot be used to provide minimum
population-based rates of disease - not representative of other clinics
- integration of quality STD care into primary care
may suffer
- Advantages
- obtain higher quality data
- more detailed data on patients
14Case-Reporting in the Private Sector
- Can be difficult to co-ordinate but may be
improved through - site visits
- training courses
- provision of written updates on STI diagnosis and
treatment
15Critical Components of Data Quality
- completeness the proportion of reported cases
with completed information - validity the proportion of each data element
that is correctly reported - timeliness the time intervals between
surveillance steps
16Analysis of Case-Reports
- Quarterly
- comparison of quarterly number of case-reports
with the same quarter from previous year - examination of quarterly trends in number of
cases and prevalence from past 1-2 years
- Annually
- annual case reports
- annual trend in overall population-based rates of
reported cases, using available census data and
stratified by basic demographic categories
17Prevalence Assessment and Monitoring
- Primary purposes
- identify population subgroups with high STI
prevalence - monitor trends in STI prevalence among defined
populations - Primary limitation
- no role in the management of individual patients
and their partners
18Useful STIs for prevalence assessment and
monitoring
In settings where patients are seen without
relation to symptoms
- syphilis (m,f)
- gonorrhoea (m,f)
- chlamydia (m,f)
- trichomoniasis (f)
- genital ulcer disease (m,f)
- urethral discharge (m)
19Prevalence Assessment Studies
- best done among high risk populations which are
likely to have high prevalence - minimally, assessment of prevalence must be done
in major cities - assessment of STI prevalence among women should
include syphilis, chlamydia, and genital ulcers.
20Elements of Prevalence Studies
- sample size
- data elements and reporting formats
- measuring test positivity vs. prevalence
- linkages with HIV seroprevalence surveys
- analysis and interpretation
21Assessing Syndrome Etiologies
- Objectives
- Provide data for guiding STI syndromic management
- Assist in the interpretation of syndromic
case-reports - Assist in the assessment of disease burden due to
specific pathogens
22Laboratory Requirements for Assessing Syndrome
Etiologies
- For urethral discharge
- microscopy chlamydia testing in selected
settings - For genital ulcer disease
- syphilis serologic testing
- chancroid culture, HSV culture or antigen
detection test available in selected settings - For vaginal discharge syndrome
- Gram stain, wet mount, KOH prep
- diagnostic test for chlamydia and gonorrhea
23Sampling considerations
- Selecting Populations and frequency
- Ideally, syndrome etiologies should be assessed
in different types of populations with high and
low rates of disease and which are geographically
distributed - Sample Size
- A sample size of 50 - 100 specimens can provide
adequate confidence limits in most cases although
true sample size is dependent on specific
etiologies and the expected prevalence of
pathogens
24Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring
- Neisseria gonorrhoeae/Haemophilus ducreyi
- As a core component of STI surveillance and
because of the extensive use of antibiotics to
treat gonococcal infections, it is important for
all countries to monitor microbial resistance in
N. gonorrhoeae. If chancroid is high, periodic
assessment of resistance in H. ducreyi is also
recommended.
- OBJECTIVES
- To obtain data necessary for developing
guidelines for treatment - Demographic and risk information obtained may
also be used to further characterize risk factors
for resistance - Determine the local epidemiology of a disease
25Laboratory requirementsfor resistance monitoring
- ability to culture organisms
- perform biochemical and serologic confirmatory
tests - testing for the minimum inhibitory concentration
on antimicrobial agents
26Special STI Surveillance -related Studies
- Used to address STI surveillance issues which
are not part of routine case reporting or
prevalence assessments. - Examples
- outbreak investigations
- prevalence of viral STIs
- estimation of economic costs of STIs
27Evaluation of Surveillance Systems
- identification of all STI surveillance
activities, characterized by components, and
syndrome or disease - initially evaluate each component separately,
separate attention should be paid to each
syndrome or disease - overall assessment identifying gaps, duplication,
and areas in need of strengthening
28Disseminating, communicating, and using STI
surveillance data
- disseminate to health centers and clinicians
- national STI programme managers
- In communicating consider using...
- annual reports
- newsletters
- press releases
- fact sheets