Our objectives were to describe the baseline findings of a trial of antibiotic prophylaxis to prevent sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and HIV-1 in a cohort of Nairobi female sex workers (FSWs). A questionnaire was administered and a medical examination was performed. HIV-negative women were randomly assigned to either one gram azithromycin or placebo monthly. Mean age of the 318 women was 32 years, mean duration of sex work 7 years and mean number of clients was 4 per day. High-risk behaviour was frequent: 14% practised anal intercourse, 23% sex during menses, and 3% used intravenous drugs. While 20% reported condom use with all clients, 37% never use condoms. However, STI prevalence was relatively low: HIV-1 27%, bacterial vaginosis 46%, Trichomonas vaginalis 13%, Neisseria gonorrhoeae 8%, Chlamydia trachomatis 7%, syphilis 6% and cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) 3%. It appears feasible to access a population of high-risk FSWs in Nairobi with prevention programmes, including a proposed trial of HIV prevention through STI chemoprophylaxis.
Chancroid is gaining importance as a sexually transmitted disease because of its association with transmission of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1). Effective, simply administered therapy for chancroid is necessary. Fleroxacin is effective against Haemophilus ducreyi in vitro. We performed an initial randomized clinical trial to assess the efficacy of fleroxacin for treatment of chancroid in Nairobi, Kenya. Fifty-three men with culture-positive chancroid were randomly assigned to receive either 200 mg (group 1) or 400 mg (group 2) of fleroxacin as a single oral dose. Groups 1 and 2 were similar with regard to severity of disease, bubo formation, and HIV-1 status. A satisfactory clinical response to therapy was noted in 23 of 26 patients (88%) in group 1 and 18 of 23 patients (78%) in group 2. Bacteriological failure occurred in 1 of 26 evaluable patients (4%) in group 1 and 4 of 23 evaluable patients (17%) in group 2. Two of 37 HIV-1-seronegative men (5%) and 3 of 11 HIV-1-infected men (27%) were bacteriological failures. Fleroxacin, 200 or 400 mg as a single oral dose, is efficacious therapy for microbiologically proven chancroid in patients who do not have concurrent HIV-1 infection. Among HIV-1-infected men, a single dose of 200 or 400 mg of fleroxacin is inadequate therapy for chancroid.
In an effort to identify an immunological basis for natural resistance to HIV-1 infection, we have examined serum antibody responses to HLA class I antigens in female prostitutes of the Nairobi Sex Workers Study. Anti-HLA antibodies are known to block HIV infectivity in vitro and can be protective against SIV challenge in macaques immunized with purified class I HLA. Thus, it was postulated that broadly cross-reactive alloantibodies recognizing common HLA alleles in the client population might contribute to the prevention of heterosexual transmission of HIV. In fact, 12% of the women were found to have serum IgG antibodies against class I alloantigens. However, this alloantibody did not correlate with the HIV status of the women and was found in a similar proportion of HIV-positive and HIV-resistant women. The observed levels of alloantibody did not increase with HIV infection in susceptible individuals, suggesting that potential antigenic mimicry between HIV and host HLA class I antigens does not significantly increase levels of anti-class I antibodies. The lack of correlation between serum anti-allo-class I HLA antibodies and the risk of sexual transmission indicates that this humoral immune response is unlikely to be the natural mechanism behind the HIV-resistance phenotype of persistently HIV-seronegative women. This result, however, does not preclude the further investigation of alloimmunization as an artificial HIV immunization strategy.
OBJECTIVE:To monitor prospectively patients with Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea (CAD) in a six hundred bed tertiary care hospital to determine which factors influenced the recurrence of the diarrhea. DESIGN: A prospective, nonrandomized study. After an initial diagnosis of CAD, patients were interviewed, and each week stool samples and environmental samples were monitored for the presence of toxigenic C difficile for as long as the patients remained in hospital. The relationship of concurrent antibiotics, prolonged fecal excretion of organism or toxin, and environmental contamination was assessed. PATIENTS: Over a two-and-a-half year period, 75 consecutive patients with CAD were selected and those who gave their written informed consent were enrolled. A control group to evaluate environmental contamination consisted of 75 patients with diarrhea not associated with C difficile. RESULTS: Of the 75 CAD patients, 11 (14.7%) had a recurrence of their diarrhea. Diarrhea recurrence was associated with an increased rate of prolonged excretion of toxigenic organism and/or C difficile toxin(s) (nine of 11 [81.8%] compared with nine of 64 [14.1%]; P£ 0.0001; relative risk 14.25; 95% CI 3.383 to 60.023). The risk of diarrhea recurrence was not related to a specific antibiotic but to concurrent therapy. Treatment within 30 days of initial CAD-specific treatment with an antibiotic other than metronidazole or vancomycin occurred significantly more frequently in patients with recurrence of diarrhea compared with those who did not have a recurrence (eight of 11 [72.7%] Pour voir le résumé, voir page suivante C lostridium difficile is the most commonly known etiological agent of hospital-acquired infectious diarrhea (1-7). Only strains that produce both toxin A and toxin B have been associated with human disease (7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14)(15)(16). Approximately 15% (range of 5% to 24%) of patients who are treated for C difficile-associated diarrhea have a recurrence of their diarrhea (17)(18)(19); this may be due to relapse with their original C difficile strain or due to reinfection with a different strain (20). The basis for the recurrence of diarrhea and the role of prolonged fecal excretion of toxin in the risk of diarrhea recurrence have not been well studied. The aims of this study were to follow prospectively 75 patients with C difficile-associated diarrhea (CAD), and determine the frequency and temporal distribution of diarrhea recurrence; determine whether factors such as concurrent antibiotics, or continued excretion of C difficile toxin(s) or toxigenic organisms in patients treated for CAD correlated with diarrhea recurrence; and determine the frequency of environmental contamination and the relationship of environmental isolates to patient isolates. PATIENTS AND METHODS Patient populations studied:Inpatients of St Boniface General Hospital, St Boniface, Manitoba, with diarrhea, whose stool samples had been tested for C difficile cytotoxin, were reviewed on a daily basis. The routine CAD diagnostic test...
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