Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Chagas disease and syphilis are considered a mayor public health problem worldwide. Both pathologies affect socio-economic vulnerable population and they are both transmitted congenitally, causing an alarming increasing number of infected newborns. The current diagnostic methods for these diseases are based on serology follow-up until 8 to 10 months from birth, which considering the population usually involved and their scarce resources, usually translates in loosing continuity in their controls and follow-up. Chagas prevalence in pregnant women is 4% with an incidence of Congenital Chagas disease of 1500 annual cases. From those, only 1 third are diagnosed. In the investigators and other authors experience, the detection of DNA of Trypanosoma cruzi by PCR shows an elevation of parasitemia at birth, with a peak at the first month of life. Syphilis is a re-emergent pathology, preventable and curable when diagnose is achieved early at the beginning of pregnancy.. The cost-effectiveness of performing screening for this infection is widely demonstrated, preventing high morbi-mortality for children when applied to pregnant women. For both syphilis and Chagas diagnosis, there are some studies comparing PCR follow-up with conventional serology, but none were validated and there is still need to bring more evidence in order to modify current practice. The investigators propose a sequential study of PCR for Tryipanosoma cruzi and Treponema pallidum from birth, believing this will increase sensitivity of congenital Chagas and syphilis diagnose and improve follow-up of these patients.


Clinical Trial Description

n/a


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04084379
Study type Observational
Source Hospital de Niños R. Gutierrez de Buenos Aires
Contact
Status Recruiting
Phase
Start date July 1, 2019
Completion date September 1, 2024

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03660488 - Cefixime for Alternative Syphilis Treatment Phase 2
Recruiting NCT05548426 - Linezolid for Syphilis Pilot Study Phase 2
Not yet recruiting NCT05951751 - The TRIple Elimination Model Of Mother-to-child Transmission Program (TRI-MOM) N/A
Completed NCT02191527 - Evaluating the Effectiveness of Point-of-care Diagnostic Technologies in MCH Services in Mozambique N/A
Completed NCT01439503 - Safer Sex Program for Young African-American Men Phase 2
Terminated NCT01540227 - Penicillin Therapeutic Drug Monitoring in the Treatment of Infectious Syphilis.
Completed NCT02257658 - Efficacy of Doxycycline Prophylaxis to Reduce Syphilis in High-Risk, HIV-Positive MSM N/A
Completed NCT02611765 - Syphilis Response to Higher Penicillin Dosage: The 2.4 Versus 7.2 Study Phase 4
Completed NCT03709862 - Global Syphilis Sequencing
Completed NCT03637660 - Phase 4 Comparative Trial of Benzathine Penicillin G for Treatment of Early Syphilis in Subjects With or Without HIV Infection Phase 4
Active, not recruiting NCT03310424 - Transcriptomic and Next Generation Sequencing Approaches to Infection With Treponema Pallidum
Completed NCT00207506 - Lay Health Advisors for Sexually Transmitted Disease Prevention Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT00213018 - Safety, Acceptability and Preliminary Effectiveness of Carraguard™ (PC-515) in Preventing HIV/STI Transmission Phase 2
Recruiting NCT06059443 - mLab App Plus: A Randomized Controlled Trial of a Mobile Health (mHealth) Intervention N/A
Completed NCT04480749 - Syphilis Self-testing to Expand Test Uptake Among Men Who Have Sex With Men (SST) Phase 4
Not yet recruiting NCT06058286 - MENJAGA: Continuous Quality Improvement for Antenatal HIV, Syphilis and Hepatitis B Testing in Indonesia N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT03980223 - Evaluation of Doxycycline Post-exposure Prophylaxis to Reduce Sexually Transmitted Infections in PrEP Users and HIV-infected Men Who Have Sex With Men Phase 4
Completed NCT01465607 - Implementation of an Efficacious Intervention for High Risk Women in Mexico N/A
Completed NCT00553111 - Video Tool to Promote Knowledge of Syphilis as Facilitator of HIV Transmission N/A
Active, not recruiting NCT06367621 - Retrospective Study of iStatis Syphilis Ab Test (POC)