The clinical and economic consequences of screening young men for genital chlamydial infection.

Sex Transm Dis

Department of Health Services, Maternal and Child Health, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98104, USA.

Published: February 2003

Background: Wide-scale application of urine-based screening of asymptomatic men for chlamydial infection has not been thoroughly assessed.

Goal: The goal was to compare clinical and economic consequences of three strategies: (1). no screening, (2). screening with ligase chain reaction (LCR) assay of urine, and (3). prescreening urine with a leukocyte esterase test (LE) and confirming positives with LCR.

Study Design: We used a decision analytic model.

Results: At a chlamydia prevalence of 5%, the no screening cost was US dollars 7.44 per man screened, resulting in 522 cases of pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) per 100000 men. LE-LCR was most cost-effective, preventing 242 cases of PID over no screening at an additional cost of US dollars 29.14 per male screened. The LCR strategy prevented 104 more cases of PID than LE-LCR but cost US dollars 22.62 more per male screened. For this to be more efficient than LE-LCR, the LCR assay cost needed to decline to
Conclusion: At a chlamydia prevalence of 5%, LE-LCR is the most efficient use of resources. If LCR cost decreases or chlamydia prevalence increases, the LCR strategy is favored.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/00007435-200302000-00001DOI Listing

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