AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on understanding patients with discordant syphilis test results, specifically those who tested positive with treponemal chemiluminescence immunoassays (CIA) but negative with rapid plasma regain (RPR).
  • During the research, a significant portion (58%) of the CIA-positive patients had RPR-negative results, with many showing high rates of prior syphilis treatment and certain risk factors, such as being male and HIV-positive.
  • The findings suggest that the TP-PA test, used alongside clinical assessments, is crucial in managing discordant serology cases, highlighting that some TP-PA-negative results may indicate false positives in areas with low syphilis prevalence.

Article Abstract

Background: Screening for syphilis with treponemal chemiluminescence immunoassays (CIA) identifies patients with discordant serology who are not identified with traditional screening methods (eg, CIA-positive, rapid plasma regain (RPR)-negative). We sought to describe the clinical characteristics and management of patients with discordant syphilis serology.

Methods: From August 2007-October 2007, patients with CIA-positive, RPR-negative serology were tested with the Treponema pallidum particle agglutination assay (TP-PA) at Kaiser Permanente Northern California. Clinical and demographic characteristics, prior syphilis history and CIA index values were compared for CIA-positive, RPR-negative patients according to TP-PA status.

Results: Of 21,623 assays, 439 (2%) were CIA-positive and 255/439 (58%) were RPR-negative; subsequently, 184 (72%) were TP-PA-positive and 71 (28%) were TP-PA--negative. TP-PA--positive patients were more likely to be male, HIV-positive, homosexual, previously treated for syphilis (57% versus 9%), with higher median CIA index values (9.8 versus 1.6) (all P < .0001). After repeat testing, 7/31 (23%) CIA-positive, RPR-negative, TP-PA--negative patients seroreverted to CIA-negative.

Conclusions: TP-PA results in conjunction with clinical/behavioral assessment helped guide the management of patients with CIA-positive, RPR-negative serology. TP-PA-positive patients were both highly likely to have prior syphilis and major epidemiologic risk factors for syphilis. CIA-positive, RPR-negative, TP-PA-negative serology may represent a false-positive CIA in low-prevalence populations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/infdis/jir524DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The study focused on understanding patients with discordant syphilis test results, specifically those who tested positive with treponemal chemiluminescence immunoassays (CIA) but negative with rapid plasma regain (RPR).
  • During the research, a significant portion (58%) of the CIA-positive patients had RPR-negative results, with many showing high rates of prior syphilis treatment and certain risk factors, such as being male and HIV-positive.
  • The findings suggest that the TP-PA test, used alongside clinical assessments, is crucial in managing discordant serology cases, highlighting that some TP-PA-negative results may indicate false positives in areas with low syphilis prevalence.
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