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EDITORIAL

Where are we going with chlamydia?

Basil Donovan A B C and Andrew E. Grulich A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A National Centre in HIV Epidemiology and Clinical Research, University of New South Wales, Second Floor, 376 Victoria Street, Darlinghurst, NSW 2010, Australia.

B Sydney Sexual Health Centre, Sydney Hospital, Sydney, NSW 2000, Australia.

C Corresponding author. Email: bdonovan@nchecr.unsw.edu.au

Sexual Health 3(4) 207-208 https://doi.org/10.1071/SH06053
Submitted: 19 September 2006  Accepted: 17 October 2006   Published: 17 November 2006

Chlamydia continues to perplex us. Throughout much of the industrialised world, notifications have been relentlessly rising for a decade. Several countries have launched national screening programs. Chlamydia infection is a generalised epidemic: while there are well recognised risk factors for individuals, no major segment of the population is spared.1

Even among the minority of the public that know what it is, in its own right chlamydia represents an insufficient threat to drive most people to abstinence, life-long exclusive relationships, or the consistent use of condoms. By the time chlamydia results in infertility or an ectopic pregnancy the organism has usually moved on. Thus, the true culprit is rarely implicated and is almost never publicly singled out as causing major disease in an individual. Only high profile and ‘incurable’ conditions like HIV infection are capable of achieving sustained behaviour change, however patchy. Nevertheless, many Australian jurisdictions and New Zealand have launched targeted education programs with goals that include encouraging condom use, raising awareness of chlamydia among the public and health professionals and recommending screening.

A consensus has emerged that more intensive and focussed population screening is needed, along with improved partner management strategies. With only 7 to 8% of women under the age of 25 years tested for chlamydia each year,1 Australia clearly has a lot more case finding to do.

From 2006, with a program budget of AU$12.5 million, the Australian Government has begun to fund a series of pilot screening projects involving a wide range of clinical services and a variety of priority populations, and with geographical diversity. This program is also funding national projects that are investigating chlamydia reinfection rates; education packages for general practitioners, rural and remote health workers, teachers, parents and young people; and a system of enhanced sentinel surveillance.2 A particularly encouraging feature of the program is that over 100 applications for project funding were received, indicating a high level of enthusiasm among many organisations.

In this context, it is timely for Sexual Health to contribute to a growing body of literature exploring enhanced chlamydia surveillance and screening strategies in various populations,3–8 including barriers to testing5,6,9 and contact tracing.10,11 In Canberra, no significant difference was found in chlamydia prevalence among men who have sex with men between clinical and community settings, from which a need for more screening of anal swabs was concluded.4 As suggested by the work of Gaydos et al.6 in Baltimore, momentary embarrassment and confidentiality concerns may be among the foremost barriers to chlamydia testing. Perhaps we need to adjust our clinical model so that the process is less intimidating for our patients. ‘Simple and inexpensive’ online resources can then be made available to the family doctor to facilitate partner management.11

An interesting hypothesis – that chlamydia prevalence may be suppressed at a population level by antibiotics given mainly for other purposes – also warrants further research.12 Using Australian cost parameters and a traditional methodology, screening women annually up to the age of 25 years is shown to be cost effective.13 It would be interesting to also examine cost effectiveness using a dynamic model. In such a model, the possibility that widespread screening could lower the population prevalence of chlamydia, thus averting incident infections could be examined. This ongoing benefit would be in addition to the prevention of complications in those women who are already infected. Alternative screening models, including screening men, also need to be assessed for cost effectiveness.

Almost certainly, with increasing testing, chlamydia notifications will continue to rise. Because it is a largely asymptomatic condition, chlamydia statistics are vulnerable to testing artefact,14,15 making notification data very difficult to interpret. A rise in notifications could be plausibly interpreted as either success (because more asymptomatic cases are being detected and treated) or failure (because more transmission is occurring) of a more widespread testing campaign.

Clearly, we need surveillance strategies that can differentiate these outcomes. Repeated cross-sectional chlamydia prevalence surveys of the same populations are one option. Enhanced sentinel surveillance in a range of clinical services that are capable of denominating their priority populations, determine testing rates and report positive yield in a longitudinal fashion is another option. With the abandonment at the end of 2005 of the Medicare item specific to chlamydia testing, a crucial surveillance tool was lost for the time being. It is rumoured that commonsense will prevail and the item number can be restored soon. No single surveillance method will give us all the information that we will need to know where we are going.



References


[1] Chen MY,  Donovan B. Genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection in Australia: epidemiology and clinical implications. Sex Health 2004; 1 189–96.
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[2] Tony Abbott, Minister for Health and Ageing. Chlamydia projects to target high-risk groups. Media release, 8 August 2006.

[3] Bateson DJ,  Weisberg E,  Lota H. Chlamydia trachomatis infection in the family planning clinical setting across New South Wales. Sex Health 2006; 3 15–20.
PubMed |

[4] Currie MJ,  Martin SJ,  Soo TM,  Bowden F. Screening for Chlamydia trachomatis and Neisseria gonorrhoeae in men who have sex with men in clinical and non-clinical settings. Sex Health 2006; 3 123–6.
PubMed |

[5] Kang M,  Rochford A,  Johnston V,  Jackson J,  Freedman E,  Brown K,  Mindel A. Prevalence of Chlamydia trachomatis infection among ‘high risk’ young people in New South Wales. Sex Health 2006; 3 253–4.
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[6] Gaydos CA,  Rizzo-Price PA,  Barnes M,  Dwyer K,  Wood BJ,  Hogan MT. The use of focus groups to design an internet-based program for chlamydia screening with self-administered vaginal swabs: what women want. Sex Health 2006; 3 209–15.
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[9] Hocking JS,  Lim MSC,  Vidanapathirana J,  Read TRH,  Hellard M. Chlamydia testing in general practice – a survey of Victorian general practitioners. Sex Health 2006; 3 241–4.
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[10] Edmiston N,  Chuah J,  McLaws M-L. An audit of contact tracing activities and record for chlamydia in an urban sexual health clinic. Sex Health 2006; 3 127–8.
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[11] Tomnay JE,  Gebert RL,  Fairley CK. A survey of partner notification practices among general practitioners and their use of an internet resource for partner notification for Chlamydia trachomatis. Sex Health 2006; 3 217–20.
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[12] Ginige S,  Chen MY,  Hocking JS,  Read TRH,  Fairley CK. Antibiotic consumption and chlamydia prevalence in international studies. Sex Health 2006; 3 221–4.
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[13] Walleser S,  Salkeld G,  Donovan B. The cost effectiveness of screening for genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection in Australia. Sex Health 2006; 3 225–34.
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[14] Hocking J,  Fairley CK,  Counahan M,  Crofts N. The pattern of notification and testing for genital Chlamydia trachomatis infection in Victoria, 1998–2000. Aust NZ J Public Health 2003; 27 405–8.
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[15] Chen MY,  Fairley CK,  Donovan B. Nowhere near the point of diminishing returns: correlations between chlamydia testing and notification rates in New South Wales. Aust NZ J Public Health 2005; 29 249–53.
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