Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
2.1 Primary Study Hypothesis In sub-Saharan Africa, between 2.5-17% of pregnant women are infected with syphilis [1]. It is estimated that 53-82% of women with untreated syphilis had adverse outcomes compared to only 10-21% of uninfected women[2]. The investigators and others have shown that syphilis screening integrated into an HIV antenatal clinic with prevention of mother to child transmission (PMTCT) is highly accepted with excellent uptake. Unfortunately, the minority of male partners come in for testing and treatment (1%-27%) which has important implications for the roll-out of rapid syphilis testing and the inability to detect reinfection with treponemal antibody test as the test will remain positive despite treatment. The investigators hypothesize that sending an SMS reminder or a telephone call reminder by a health care worker will be more effective than a standard notification slip given to women to bring male partners to antennal clinic for testing and treatment.
Full description
Title: Comparison of Different Partner Notification Strategies after Antenatal Syphilis Screening Short Title: Syphilis Treatment of Partners (STOP) Trial Objectives: Primary For pregnant women who test rapid syphilis test positive; to compare the proportion of male partners who report to the clinic for syphilis testing (and treatment) when the women are given only partner notification slips (standard of care) compared to a notification slip plus a weekly automated SMS reminder OR a notification slip plus a weekly nurse phone call reminder.
Secondary
Study Population and sample size: • Pregnant women from 14years and above reporting to antenatal and subsequently postnatal clinics at the Infectious Disease Institute, Mulago Hospital (antenatal and STI clinics), and Kasangati Health Center IV in Kampala, Uganda who screen positive by rapid treponemal antibody test.
Study Duration: Approximately 24 months
Endpoints:
Primary:
Secondary:
Description of Study Design: This is a prospective clinical trial in which pregnant syphilis positive women (tested by rapid treponemal antibody kit) will be randomized to one of three arms to notify participants to bring their sexual partners at risk for syphilis for syphilis screening and treatment. Women will be randomized in a 1:1:1 ratio to one of the following three strategies: A) To receive a notification slip per the Ministry of Health standard B) to receive a notification slip plus an SMS reminder or C) to receive a notification slip plus standardized nurse/clinician initiated phone call.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Individuals must meet all of the following inclusion criteria in order to be eligible to participate:
Exclusion criteria
Any subjects meeting any of the following exclusion criteria at baseline will be excluded from study participation:
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
1,752 participants in 3 patient groups
Loading...
Central trial contact
Joshua K Mbazira, CO; Rosalind Parkes-Ratanshi, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal