STI Screening and Prevention

STI Screening and Prevention

STI Screening and Prevention

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Epidemiology & Burden - India's Silent Battle

  • India faces a substantial STI burden, largely under-reported due to social stigma.
  • Prevalent STIs: Genital Herpes (HSV), HPV, Chlamydia, Gonorrhea, Syphilis, Trichomoniasis, HIV.
  • High-risk groups: Adolescents & young adults (15-29 yrs), Female Sex Workers (FSWs), Men who have Sex with Men (MSM), Injecting Drug Users (IDUs).
  • Untreated STIs cause: Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID), infertility, ectopic pregnancy, certain cancers (e.g., cervical), adverse pregnancy outcomes, ↑HIV transmission.
  • National AIDS Control Programme (NACP) spearheads surveillance and response efforts.

⭐ NACP Phase V (2021-26) targets elimination of vertical transmission of HIV & Syphilis in India.

Screening Principles - Detect & Defend

  • Goal: Early detection of STIs to interrupt transmission, prevent sequelae (e.g., infertility, cancer), and reduce individual morbidity.
  • WHO Screening Criteria (Adapted):
    • Important health problem.
    • Accepted treatment.
    • Diagnostic/treatment facilities.
    • Recognizable early stage.
    • Suitable & acceptable test.
    • Natural history understood.
    • Cost-effective.
  • Key Strategies & Components:
    • Targeted Screening: Focus on high-risk populations (e.g., MSM, IVDU, multiple partners, CSWs, attendees of STI clinics, pregnant women).
    • Counselling: Essential pre-test (informed consent, risk reduction) & post-test (results, implications, partner management).
    • 📌 The 5 P's of Sexual History: Partners, Practices, Protection from STIs, Past history of STIs, Prevention of pregnancy.
    • Partner Notification & Management (EPT): Crucial to break transmission chain.
    • Vaccination: Primary prevention (e.g., HPV, Hepatitis B).

⭐ Universal screening for HIV, Syphilis, and HBsAg is recommended for all pregnant women at their first antenatal visit as per NACO guidelines.

Specific STI Screening - Pathogen Patrol

  • HIV:
    • 4th gen EIA (p24 Ag + Ab); Rapid tests. Confirm: Western Blot/HIV RNA.
  • Syphilis:
    • Non-treponemal (VDRL, RPR) → Treponemal (TPHA, FTA-ABS).

    ⭐ Reverse sequence screening (automated treponemal test first) is increasingly common.

  • Gonorrhea (GC) & Chlamydia (CT):
    • NAAT (urine, endocervical/vaginal/urethral swabs) - Gold Standard.
  • Hepatitis B (HBV):
    • HBsAg (infection).
    • Anti-HBs (immunity).
    • Total Anti-HBc (exposure).
  • Hepatitis C (HCV):
    • Anti-HCV Ab → HCV RNA PCR if positive.
  • HPV (Cervical Cancer):
    • Pap Smear: Age 21-29 (q3yrs).
    • Co-testing (Pap + HPV DNA) or HPV DNA alone: Age 30-65 (q5yrs).
  • Trichomonas vaginalis:
    • Wet mount; NAAT (preferred).
  • Herpes Simplex Virus (HSV):
    • Clinical Dx. Lesion PCR/culture if needed. Type-specific serology (limited screening value).

Prevention Strategies - Shield Up!

  • ABC: Abstinence, Be faithful, Condom use.
  • Condoms: Consistent & correct use (male/female) ↓ STI risk.
  • Vaccination:
    • HPV (Gardasil, Cervarix): Prevents anogenital cancers/warts.
    • Hepatitis B: Prevents HBV infection.
  • Partner Management: Notification & treatment (EPT).
  • Screening: Regular testing for at-risk individuals.
  • Biomedical:
    • PrEP (HIV): Daily Tenofovir/Emtricitabine for high-risk.
    • PEP (HIV): Antiretrovirals <72h post-exposure (ideally <2h).
  • Antenatal Screening: Prevents vertical transmission.
  • Education: Promote safer sex. Safe Sex Practices for STI Prevention

⭐ PEP for HIV should be initiated as early as possible, ideally within 2 hours, but no later than 72 hours post-exposure.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • NAAT is gold standard for Chlamydia & Gonorrhea diagnosis.
  • Syphilis screening: VDRL/RPR (non-treponemal), confirm with TPHA/FTA-ABS (treponemal).
  • HIV screening: 4th gen ELISA, confirm with Western Blot or HIV RNA PCR.
  • HPV vaccine (ages 9-26, up to 45 years) prevents cervical & anogenital cancers.
  • Screen all pregnant women & high-risk individuals for Hepatitis B (HBsAg).
  • Effective STI control requires partner notification & treatment.
  • Consistent condom use remains the cornerstone of STI prevention.
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Practice Questions: STI Screening and Prevention

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