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Summary

Assessing syndrome aetiologies provides information on the relative contributions of different pathogens to the main STI syndromes. This guides STI syndromic treatment and assists in the interpretation of syndromic case reports.



Behavioural and Biological Surveillance Surveys

Behavioural surveys of certain high-risk groups and of the general population are an integral part of third-generation surveillance. They can be combined with HIV sero-prevalence surveys.


Behavioural surveys can also be combined with STI prevalence surveys done along with HIV testing. These combined STI/HIV behavioural surveillance surveys collect data that compare patients’ high-risk behaviour with the presence of STIs and HIV.
Behavioural

surveys


Behavioural surveys use questionnaires to examine the prevalence of behaviours associated with HIV transmission. In these surveys, prevalence is the number of people who have a certain behaviour (usually within a specified time period) divided by the total number of people who answered the question.
Behavioural surveys may be conducted as part of:

  • national health and demographic surveys

  • HIV behavioural surveillance or HIV sero-surveillance in high-risk populations.

In behavioural surveys, you interview people about their sexual and other high-risk behaviours that are associated with an elevated risk of STI or HIV infection.


Data elements

Use consistent data elements to determine risk behaviour. Use behavioural survey questions, such as:




  • the number of sexual partners in the past three or 12 months

  • new sexual partners in the past three months

  • condom use at the last sexual intercourse with someone other than a regular sexual partner

  • alcohol or drug use in the past 12 months

  • giving or receiving money for sex in the past 12 months.

When used with behavioural surveys, HIV and STI testing assess risk behaviours and HIV and STI burden in high-risk and bridging populations, as well as in the general population. Bridging populations include people in high-risk groups who have sex with people of lower risk in the general population. An example of this might be a female commercial sex worker having sex with her boyfriend, who does not have other high-risk behaviours.


Choosing STIs

for behavioural

surveys

When you are choosing which STI to test for in a combined STI/HIV and behavioural survey, consider two things:



  • the laboratory infrastructure development in the country

  • the type of populations under study.

These assessments almost always include HIV testing.

Summary

Combined STI/HIV and behavioural surveys combine STI and HIV prevalence assessments with behavioural surveys. These can be done in the general population or in specific high-risk populations.


Monitoring of Anti-Microbial Resistance of STI Pathogens

Why monitor

for resistance?
Drugs are routinely used to treat STI infections. This has led to increasing rates of resistance. Resistance is the alteration of a pathogen that makes it non-responsive to a particular anti-microbial agent. Simply put, the drug being used no longer controls or eliminates the infection.
Resistance monitoring entails examining in the laboratory the effectiveness of various anti-microbial agents in inhibiting the growth of N. gonorrhoeae. In resistance monitoring, various concentrations of a given anti-microbial agent are used to determine the minimum concentration of that agent required to stop the organism from growing. Depending on the concentration of the anti-microbial agent required to inhibit growth, the organism can be classified as sensitive, intermediate or resistant to a particular anti-microbial agent. Usually the organism is checked for sensitivity against several different anti-microbials, often from different classes.
As an example of how to monitor anti-microbial resistance, we will discuss N. gonorrhoeae, a core component of STI surveillance. Resistance monitoring is done to:

It is also important to monitor N. gonorrhoeae to ensure that the medication given to a patient with a gonococcal infection will cure the infection. Effective treatment for gonorrhoea:




  • relieves the signs and symptoms and achieves microbiologic cure in individual patients

  • prevents complications of pelvic inflammatory disease, chronic pelvic pain and infertility in women

  • reduces the risk of HIV transmission by decreasing the presence of white blood cells at the cervix and urethra

  • interrupts transmission of N. gonorrhoea.

Laboratory

requirements
Surveillance surveys for anti-microbial resistance of STI pathogens are usually organised and conducted by the national HIV/STI control programme. Sites are chosen that have healthcare facilities with well-
Laboratory requirements, continued
trained staff and laboratory expertise. Only selected sites will have the capacity to conduct these types of surveillance activities.
In our example of monitoring N. gonorrhoeae and selecting anti-microbial drugs for susceptibility testing, give priority to drugs commonly used for treating gonococcal infections. A laboratory performing susceptibility testing for N. gonorrhoeae should be able to accomplish the following tasks:


  • culture the organism

  • perform biochemical and serologic confirmatory tests

  • perform minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) agar dilution testing of anti-microbial agents.

If the national reference laboratory does not have this capacity, it may send isolates to a regional laboratory in another country for testing. An isolate is a culture of bacteria or other cells.




  • Regional networks supported by WHO Collaborating Centres have been established in several WHO regions to conduct anti-microbial susceptibility testing for N. gonorrhoeae.

  • National reference laboratories are encouraged by WHO and UNAIDS to participate in these centres' programmes of quality control and assessment.

Frequency of

assessment

The assessment of anti-microbial resistance should be performed at least once a year. When feasible, it is best to sample isolates on an ongoing basis rather than during only one month or quarter per year. For example, you can test 20 isolates per month at each sentinel site throughout the year. Ongoing sampling makes it more likely that newly emerging resistance or large changes in patterns of resistance will be detected early.


If trends in susceptibility are to be reliably monitored over time, variations in the sentinel sites and sampling procedures should be minimised.
Summary

In view of the increasing rates of drug-resistant pathogens worldwide, it is important for each country to monitor anti-microbial resistance in Neisseria gonorrhoeae as a core component of STI surveillance.




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