Gonorrhea Clinical Trial
Official title:
Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests for the Diagnosis of Pharyngeal and Rectal Chlamydia Trachomatis and Neisseria Gonorrhoeae Infections
Investigators at the University of Alabama in Birmingham in collaboration with investigators from the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta are evaluating the performance of three commercial nucleic acid amplification tests for the detection of Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae in pharyngeal and rectal swab specimens. Cultures for C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae are performed as additional reference tests. Study subjects are men and women attending sexually transmitted disease (STD) and HIV care clinics in Birmingham, Alabama, who report sexual behaviors that place them at risk for pharyngeal or rectal sexually transmitted infections.
In the latter part of the 1990's, testing for Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria
gonorrhoeae infections was revolutionized by the introduction of nucleic acid amplification
tests (NAATs) which achieve greater sensitivity than traditional culture methods by
exponentially replicating the nucleic acid of these organisms. The specimens collected for
NAATs are easier to transport and NAATs permit collection of less invasive specimens for
testing (i.e. voided urine or patient-collected vaginal swabs for women rather than urethral
or endocervical swabs). Despite their somewhat higher costs, these tests have been found to
be preferred by patients (because specimens can be collected less invasively), by clinicians
(because of both their ease of collection and increased sensitivity), and to permit expanded
screening both in traditional clinical settings and at outreach sites where testing has not
typically been done in the past.
NAATs have been cleared by FDA for testing of genital specimens (cervical and male urethral
swabs and urine), but the performance of NAATs has not been adequately evaluated for
diagnosis of C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae infections occurring at rectal or pharyngeal
sites of sexual exposure. Increasing numbers of heterosexual individuals might be engaging
in orogenital or rectal sexual activity, especially adolescents and young adults who might
view such exposures as less risky with respect to pregnancy and sexually transmitted
diseases (STD) than penile-vaginal intercourse. Pharyngeal and rectal exposures, often
without use of condoms, are relatively common among MSM. Recent demonstration of resurgent
sexually transmitted diseases and unsafe sexual practices among men-who-have-sex-with-men
(MSM), including those who are infected with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV),
provides an especially strong public health imperative to the need for careful evaluation of
NAATs with pharyngeal and rectal specimens.
The primary aim of this study is to compare the performance of the three NAATs that are
available commercially to test pharyngeal and rectal specimens for C. trachomatis and N.
gonorrhoeae infections with culture, the current method of choice, and with each other. In
order to enroll adequate numbers of individuals with such infections, the study will be
conducted during a 3-year period in a STD clinic and two HIV care clinics located in
Birmingham, AL. Enrollment will be confined to individuals who are at high risk for genital
C. trachomatis or N. gonorrhoeae infection, or who give a history of orogenital or rectal
sexual exposures. An effort will be made to balance enrollment of heterosexual individuals
and MSM, but resource limitations require that sample sizes be based on combining these
subgroups.
No adequate criterion-standard for pharyngeal or rectal infections exists due to the
probable, but poorly defined, low sensitivity of the current standard, culture. Fortunately,
the 3 NAATs employ different C. trachomatis and N. gonorrhoeae molecular targets and methods
of nucleic acid amplification. By including all 3 NAATs plus culture in the study,
combinations of the results of culture and a NAAT or of two NAATs can be utilized to take
advantage of the likely independence of testing errors among truly uninfected subjects to
construct more satisfactory criterion standards for infection for the purpose of estimating
and comparing their sensitivities and specificities. A secondary aim of the study will be to
compare this methodological approach, utilizing a traditional statistical and clinical
epidemiological approach, with alternative methods that have been more widely used but
strongly criticized by statisticians and clinical epidemiologists and with newer methods
designed to meet these criticisms and to be more efficient than the traditional statistical
approaches.
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Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Diagnostic
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