BMJ Public Health (Sep 2024)

Prevalence and risk factors of curable sexually transmitted and reproductive tract infections and malaria co-infection among pregnant women at antenatal care booking in Kenya, Malawi and Tanzania: a cross-sectional study of randomised controlled trial data

  • Ulla Ashorn,
  • Christentze Schmiegelow,
  • James Dodd,
  • Feiko O ter Kuile,
  • Simon Kariuki,
  • Nigel Klein,
  • Julie Gutman,
  • Asma Khalil,
  • Alphaxard Manjurano,
  • Jenny Hill,
  • Michael Alifrangis,
  • Kamija S Phiri,
  • R Matthew Chico,
  • George Mtove,
  • Kephas Otieno,
  • Samwel Gesase,
  • Reginald A Kavishe,
  • Georgia R Gore-Langton,
  • Mwayiwawo Madanitsa,
  • Hellen C Barsosio,
  • Daniel T R Minja,
  • Jacklin Mosha,
  • Omari A Msemo,
  • John P A Lusingu,
  • Crispin Mukerebe,
  • Pius Ikigo,
  • Queen Saidi,
  • Eric D Onyango,
  • Helle Hansson,
  • Patricia Jean Hunter,
  • Matt Cairns

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjph-2023-000501
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 2

Abstract

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Objectives Malaria and curable sexually transmitted and reproductive tract infections (STIs/RTIs) are associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. This study reports the prevalence and risk factors of curable STIs/RTIs, STI/RTI co-infection and STI/RTI and malaria co-infection among HIV-negative pregnant women at their first antenatal care visit in Kenya, Malawi and Tanzania.Methods HIV-negative pregnant women of all gravidae (n=4680) were screened for syphilis with point-of-care tests and treated if positive. Separately, women provided blood samples (n=4569) for rapid plasma reagin (RPR) testing; positive cases were confirmation by Treponema pallidum particle agglutination (TPPA). Women also provided dried blood spots for batch testing of malaria by retrospective polymerase chain reaction (PCR (n=4226) methods. A randomly selected subgroup of women provided vaginal swabs for chlamydia, gonorrhoea and trichomoniasis testing by retrospective PCR batch testing (n=1431), and bacterial vaginosis diagnosis by Nugent scoring (n=1402).Results Malaria prevalence was 14.6% (95% CI 13.6 to 15.7), 45.9% (43.4 to 48.4) of women were positive for at least one curable STI/RTI and 6.7% (5.5 to 8.1) were co-infected with malaria and a curable STI/RTI. Prevalence of individual STIs/RTIs ranged from 28.5% (26.2 to 30.9) for bacterial vaginosis to 14.5% (12.7 to 16.4) for trichomoniasis, 13.8% (12.1 to 15.7) for chlamydia, 2.7% (1.9 to 3.6) for gonorrhoea and 1.7% (1.4 to 2.2) for RPR/TPPA-confirmed syphilis. The prevalence of STI/RTI co-infection was 10.1% (8.7 to 11.8). Paucigravidae, at highest risk of malaria, were also at greater risk of having chlamydia, gonorrhoea and bacterial vaginosis than multigravidae.Conclusions Of women infected with malaria, 49.0% also had a curable STI/RTI and one in five women with at least one STI/RTI were co-infected with more than one STI/RTI. Current antenatal interventions that address malaria and curable STIs/RTIs remain suboptimal. New approaches to preventing and managing these infections in pregnancy are urgently needed.Trial registration number NCT03208179.