1449CHAPTER 189 Chlamydial Infections
clinician-collected vaginal swabs, which are slightly more sensitive
than urine, be used. Urine screening tests are often used in outreach
screening programs, however. For symptomatic women undergoing a
pelvic examination, cervical swab samples are desirable because they
have slightly higher chlamydial counts. For male patients, a urine specimen is the sample of choice, but self-collected penile-meatal swabs
have been shown to be very effective.
ALTERNATIVE SPECIMEN TYPES Ocular samples from babies and
adults can be assessed by NAATs. Samples from extragenital rectal and
pharyngeal sites have been used previously to detect chlamydiae by
NAATs with validation studies, but now several commercially available
NAAT tests have FDA clearance for extragenital samples.
OTHER DIAGNOSTIC ISSUES Because NAATs detect nucleic acids
instead of live organisms, they should be used with caution as testof-cure assays. Residual nucleic acid from cells rendered noninfective
by antibiotics may continue to yield a positive result in NAATs for
as long as 3 weeks after therapy when viable organisms have actually
been eradicated. Therefore, clinicians should not use NAATs for test
of cure until after 3 weeks. The CDC currently does not recommend a
test of cure after treatment for infection with C. trachomatis. However,
because incidence studies have demonstrated that previous chlamydial
infection increases the probability of becoming reinfected, the CDC
does recommend that previously infected individuals be rescreened
3 months after treatment.
SEROLOGY Serologic testing may be helpful in the diagnosis of LGV
and neonatal pneumonia caused by C. trachomatis. The serologic test
of choice is the microimmunofluorescence (MIF) test, in which hightiter purified elementary bodies mixed with embryonated chicken yolk
sac material are affixed to a glass microscope slide to which dilutions of
sera are applied. After incubation and washing, fluorescein-conjugated
IgG or IgM antibody is applied. The test is read with an epifluorescence
microscope, with the highest dilution of serum producing visible fluorescence designated as the titer. The MIF test is not widely available
except in research laboratories and is highly labor intensive. Although
the complement fixation (CF) test can also be used, it employs
lipopolysaccharide (LPS) as the antigen and therefore identifies the
pathogen only to the genus level. Single-point titers of >1:64 support
a diagnosis of LGV, for which it is difficult to demonstrate rising antibody titers—i.e., paired serum samples are difficult to obtain since the
disease often results in the patient’s being seen by the physician after
the acute stage. Any antibody titer of >1:16 is considered significant
evidence of exposure to chlamydiae. However, serologic testing is never
recommended for diagnosis of uncomplicated genital infections of the
cervix, urethra, and lower genital tract or for C. trachomatis screening
of asymptomatic individuals.
TREATMENT
C. trachomatis Genital Infections
A 7-day course of oral doxycycline (100 mg twice daily) or a
single 1-g oral dose of azithromycin are the primary recommended regimens of treatment for uncomplicated chlamydial
TABLE 189-1 Diagnostic Tests for Sexually Transmitted and Perinatal Chlamydia trachomatis Infection
INFECTION SUGGESTIVE SIGNS/SYMPTOMS PRESUMPTIVE DIAGNOSISa CONFIRMATORY TEST OF CHOICE
Men
NGU, PGU Discharge, dysuria Gram’s stain with >4 neutrophils per
oil-immersion field; no gonococci
Urine or urethral NAAT for C. trachomatis
Epididymitis Unilateral intrascrotal swelling, pain,
tenderness; fever; NGU
Gram’s stain with >4 neutrophils per
oil-immersion field; no gonococci;
urinalysis with pyuria
Urine or urethral NAAT for C. trachomatis
Women
Cervicitis Mucopurulent cervical discharge, bleeding and
edema of the zone of cervical ectopy
Cervical Gram’s stain with ≥20 neutrophils
per oil-immersion field in cervical mucus
Urine, cervical, or vaginal NAAT for
C. trachomatis
Salpingitis Lower abdominal pain, cervical motion
tenderness, adnexal tenderness or masses
C. trachomatis always potentially
present in salpingitis
Urine, cervical, or vaginal NAAT for
C. trachomatis
Urethritis Dysuria and frequency without hematuria MPC; sterile pyuria; negative routine
urine culture
Urine or urethral NAAT for C. trachomatis
Adults of Either Sex
Proctitis Rectal pain, discharge, tenesmus, bleeding;
history of receptive anorectal intercourse
Negative gonococcal culture and Gram’s
stain; at least 1 neutrophil per oil-immersion
field in rectal Gram’s stain
Rectal NAAT for C. trachomatis or culture
Reactive arthritis NGU, arthritis, conjunctivitis, typical skin lesions Gram’s stain with >4 neutrophils per
oil-immersion field; lack of gonococci
indicative of NGU
Urine or urethral NAAT for C. trachomatis
LGV Regional adenopathy, primary lesion, proctitis,
systemic symptoms
None Culture of LGV strain from node or rectum,
occasionally from urethra or cervix; NAAT
for C. trachomatis from these sites; LGV CF
titer, ≥1:64; MIF titer, ≥1:512
Neonates
Conjunctivitis Purulent conjunctival discharge 6–18 days after
delivery
Negative culture and Gram’s stain for
gonococci, Haemophilus spp., pneumococci,
staphylococci
Conjunctival NAAT for C. trachomatis;
FA-stained scraping of conjunctival material
Infant pneumonia Afebrile, staccato cough, diffuse rales, bilateral
hyperinflation, interstitial infiltrates
None Chlamydial culture or NAAT of sputum,
pharynx, eye, rectum; MIF antibody to
C. trachomatis—fourfold change in IgG or
IgM antibody titer
a
A presumptive diagnosis of chlamydial infection is often made in the syndromes listed when gonococci are not found. A positive test for Neisseria gonorrhoeae does not
exclude the involvement of C. trachomatis, which often is present in patients with gonorrhea.
Abbreviations: CF, complement-fixing; FA, fluorescent antibody; LGV, lymphogranuloma venereum; MIF, microimmunofluorescence; MPC, mucopurulent cervicitis; NAAT, nucleic acid
amplification test; NGU, nongonococcal urethritis; PGU, postgonococcal urethritis.
Source: Reproduced with permission from WE Stamm: Chlamydial infections, in AS Fauci et al [eds]: Harrison’s Principles of Internal Medicine, 17th ed. New York, McGrawHill, 2008.
1450 PART 5 Infectious Diseases
infections. Alternative 7-day oral regimens include erythromycin (500 mg four times daily), or a fluoroquinolone (ofloxacin,
300 mg twice daily; or levofloxacin, 500 mg/d) can be used. The
single 1-g oral dose of azithromycin is as effective as a 7-day
course of doxycycline for the treatment of uncomplicated genital
C. trachomatis infections in adults. Azithromycin causes fewer
adverse gastrointestinal reactions than do older macrolides such
as erythromycin. The single-dose regimen of azithromycin has
great appeal for the treatment of patients with uncomplicated
chlamydial infection (especially those without symptoms and
those with a likelihood of poor compliance) and of the sexual
partners of infected patients. These advantages must be weighed
against the considerably greater cost of azithromycin. Whenever
possible, the single 1-g dose should be given as directly observed
therapy. Although not approved by the FDA for use in pregnancy,
this regimen appears to be safe and effective for this purpose.
Amoxicillin (500 mg three times daily for 7 days) or erythromycin (500 mg four times daily) can also be given as an alternative
to pregnant women. The fluoroquinolones are contraindicated
in pregnancy. A 2-week course of treatment is recommended for
complicated chlamydial infections (e.g., PID, epididymitis) and at
least a 3-week course of doxycycline (100 mg orally twice daily)
or erythromycin base (500 mg orally four times daily) for LGV.
Failure of treatment with a tetracycline in genital infections usually indicates poor compliance or reinfection rather than involvement of a drug-resistant strain. To date, clinically significant drug
resistance has not been observed in C. trachomatis.
Treatment or testing for chlamydiae should be considered
among N. gonorrhoeae–infected patients because of the frequency
of co-infection. Systemic treatment with erythromycin has been
recommended for ophthalmia neonatorum and for C. trachomatis
pneumonia in infants. For the treatment of adult inclusion conjunctivitis, a single 1-g dose of azithromycin was as effective as standard
10-day treatment with doxycycline. Recommended treatment regimens for both bubonic and anogenital LGV include tetracycline,
doxycycline, or erythromycin for 21 days.
SEX PARTNERS
The continued high prevalence of chlamydial infections in most
parts of the United States is due primarily to the failure to diagnose—
and therefore treat—patients with symptomatic or asymptomatic
infection and their sex partners. Urethral or cervical infection with
C. trachomatis has been well documented in a high proportion
of the sex partners of patients with NGU, epididymitis, reactive
arthritis, salpingitis, and endocervicitis. If possible, confirmatory
laboratory tests for chlamydiae should be undertaken in these
individuals, but even persons without positive tests or evidence of
clinical disease who have recently been exposed to proven or possible chlamydial infection (e.g., NGU) should be offered therapy.
A novel approach is partner-delivered therapy, in which infected
patients receive treatment and are also provided with single-dose
azithromycin to give to their sex partner(s).
NEONATES AND INFANTS
In neonates with conjunctivitis or infants with pneumonia, erythromycin ethylsuccinate or estolate can be given orally at a dosage
of 50 mg/kg per day, preferably in four divided doses, for 2 weeks.
Careful attention must be given to compliance with therapy—a frequent problem. Relapses of eye infection are common after topical
treatment with erythromycin or tetracycline ophthalmic ointment
and may also follow oral erythromycin therapy. Thus, follow-up
cultures should be performed after treatment. Both parents should
be examined for C. trachomatis infection and, if diagnostic testing is not readily available, should be treated with doxycycline or
azithromycin.
Prevention Since many chlamydial infections are asymptomatic,
effective control and prevention must involve periodic screening of
individuals at risk. Selective cost-effective screening criteria have been
developed. Among women, young age (generally <25 years) is a critical
risk factor for chlamydial infections in nearly all studies. Other risk
factors include mucopurulent cervicitis; multiple, new, or symptomatic
male sex partners; and lack of barrier contraceptive use. In some settings, screening based on young age may be as sensitive as criteria that
incorporate behavioral and clinical measures. Another strategy is universal testing of all patients in high-prevalence clinic populations (e.g.,
STD clinics, juvenile detention facilities, and family planning clinics).
The effectiveness of selective screening in reducing the prevalence of
chlamydial infection among women has been demonstrated in several
studies. In the Pacific Northwest, where extensive screening began in
family planning clinics in 1998 and in STD clinics in 1993, the prevalence declined from 10% in the 1980s to <5% in 2000. Similar trends
have occurred in association with screening programs elsewhere. In
addition, screening can effect a reduction in upper genital tract disease.
In Seattle, women at a large health maintenance organization who were
screened for chlamydial infection on a routine basis had a lower incidence of symptomatic PID than did women who received standard care
and underwent more selective screening.
In settings with low to moderate prevalence, the prevalence at
which selective screening becomes more cost-effective than universal
screening must be defined. Most studies have concluded that universal screening is preferable in settings with a chlamydial prevalence of
>3–7%. Depending on the criteria used, selective screening is likely
to be more cost-effective when prevalence falls below 3%. Nearly all
regions of the United States have now initiated screening programs,
particularly in family planning and STD clinics. Along with singledose therapy, the availability of highly sensitive and specific diagnostic
NAATs using urine specimens and self-obtained vaginal swabs makes
it feasible to mount an effective nationwide Chlamydia control program, with screening of high-risk individuals in traditional health care
settings and in novel outreach and community-based settings. The
U.S. Preventive Services Task Force has named Chlamydia screening
as a Grade B recommendation, which means that private insurance
and Medicare will cover the cost of screening under the Affordable
Care Act.
■ TRACHOMA
Epidemiology Trachoma—a sequela of ocular disease in developing countries—continues to be a leading cause of preventable
infectious blindness worldwide. The WHO estimates that ~6 million
people have been blinded by trachoma and that ~1.3 million people
in developing countries still suffer from preventable blindness due to
trachoma; certainly, hundreds of millions live in trachoma-endemic
areas. Foci of trachoma persist in Australia, the South Pacific, and Latin
America. C. trachomatis serovars A, B, Ba, and C are isolated from
patients with clinical trachoma in areas of endemicity in developing
countries in Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and South America.
The trachoma-hyperendemic areas of the world are in northern
and sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East, drier regions of the Indian
subcontinent, and Southeast Asia. In hyperendemic areas, the prevalence of trachoma is essentially 100% by the second or third year of
life. Active disease is most common among young children, who are
the reservoir for trachoma. By adulthood, active infection is infrequent
but sequelae result in blindness. In such areas, trachoma constitutes the
major cause of blindness.
Trachoma is transmitted through contact with discharges from the
eyes of infected patients. Transmission is most common under poor
hygienic conditions and most often takes place between family members or between families with shared facilities. Flies can also transfer
the mucopurulent ocular discharges, carrying the organisms on their
legs from one person to another. The International Trachoma Initiative
founded by the WHO in 1998 aims to eliminate blinding trachoma
globally by 2020.
Clinical Manifestations Both endemic trachoma and adult inclusion conjunctivitis present initially as conjunctivitis characterized by
small lymphoid follicles in the conjunctiva. In regions with hyperendemic classic blinding trachoma, the disease usually starts insidiously
1451CHAPTER 189 Chlamydial Infections
before the age of 2 years. Reinfection is common and probably contributes to the pathogenesis of trachoma. Studies using polymerase chain
reaction (PCR) or other NAATs indicate that chlamydial DNA is often
present in the ocular secretions of patients with trachoma, even in the
absence of positive cultures. Thus, persistent infection may be more
common than was previously thought.
The cornea becomes involved, with inflammatory leukocytic infiltrations and superficial vascularization (pannus formation). As the
inflammation continues, conjunctival scarring eventually distorts the
eyelids, causing them to turn inward so that the lashes constantly abrade
the eyeball (trichiasis and entropion); eventually the corneal epithelium
is abraded and may ulcerate, with subsequent corneal scarring and blindness. Destruction of the conjunctival goblet cells, lacrimal ducts, and
lacrimal gland may produce a “dry-eye” syndrome, with resultant corneal
opacity due to drying (xerosis) or secondary bacterial corneal ulcers.
Communities with blinding trachoma often experience seasonal
epidemics of conjunctivitis due to H. influenzae that contribute to
the intensity of the inflammatory process. In such areas, the active
infectious process usually resolves spontaneously in affected persons at
10–15 years of age, but conjunctival scars continue to shrink, producing trichiasis and entropion with subsequent corneal scarring in adults.
In areas with milder and less prevalent disease, the process may be
much slower, with active disease continuing into adulthood; blindness
is rare in these cases.
Eye infection with oculogenital C. trachomatis strains in sexually
active young adults presents as an acute onset of unilateral follicular
conjunctivitis and preauricular lymphadenopathy similar to that seen
in acute conjunctivitis caused by adenovirus or HSV. If untreated, the
disease may persist for 6 weeks to 2 years. It is frequently associated
with corneal inflammation in the form of discrete opacities (“infiltrates”), punctate epithelial erosions, and minor degrees of superficial
corneal vascularization. Very rarely, conjunctival scarring and eyelid
distortion occur, particularly in patients treated for many months with
topical glucocorticoids. Recurrent eye infections develop most often
in patients whose sexual partners are not treated with antimicrobial
agents.
Diagnosis The clinical diagnosis of classic trachoma can be made
if two of the following signs are present: (1) lymphoid follicles on the
upper tarsal conjunctiva; (2) typical conjunctival scarring; (3) vascular
pannus; or (4) limbal follicles or their sequelae, Herbert pits. The clinical diagnosis of endemic trachoma should be confirmed by laboratory
tests in children with relatively marked degrees of inflammation. Intracytoplasmic chlamydial inclusions are found in 10–60% of Giemsa-stained
conjunctival smears in such populations, but chlamydial NAATs are
more sensitive and are often positive when smears or cultures are negative. Follicular conjunctivitis in European or American adults living in
trachomatous regions is rarely due to trachoma.
TREATMENT
Trachoma
Adult inclusion conjunctivitis responds well to treatment with the
same regimens used in uncomplicated genital infections—namely,
azithromycin (a 1-g single oral dose) or doxycycline (100 mg twice
daily for 7 days). Simultaneous treatment of all sexual partners is
necessary to prevent ocular reinfection and chlamydial genital disease. Topical antibiotic treatment is not required for patients who
receive systemic antibiotics.
PSITTACOSIS
Psittacine birds and many other avian species act as natural reservoirs for C. psittaci–type organisms, common pathogens in domestic
mammals and birds. The species C. psittaci, which now includes only
avian strains, affects humans only as a zoonosis. (The other strains
previously included in this species have been placed into different
species that reflect the animals they infect: C. abortus, C. muridarum,
C. suis, C. felis, and C. caviae.) Although all birds are susceptible, pet
birds (parrots, parakeets, macaws, and cockatiels) and poultry (turkeys
and ducks) are most frequently involved in transmission of C. psittaci
to humans. Exposure is greatest in poultry-processing workers and in
owners of pet birds. Infectious forms of the organisms are shed from
both symptomatic and apparently healthy birds and may remain viable
for several months. C. psittaci can be transmitted to humans by direct
contact with infected birds or by inhalation of aerosols from avian
nasal discharges and from infectious avian fecal or feather dust. Transmission from person to person has never been demonstrated.
The diagnosis is usually established serologically. Psittacosis in
humans may present as acute primary atypical pneumonia (which can
be fatal in up to 10% of untreated cases); as severe chronic pneumonia;
or as a mild illness or asymptomatic infection in persons exposed to
infected birds.
■ EPIDEMIOLOGY
Fewer than 50 confirmed cases of psittacosis are reported in the
United States each year, although many more cases probably occur
than are reported. Control of psittacosis depends on control of avian
sources of infection. A pandemic of psittacosis was once stopped by
banning shipment or importation of psittacine birds. Birds can receive
prophylaxis in the form of a tetracycline-containing feed. Imported
birds are currently quarantined for 30 days of treatment.
■ CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Typical symptoms include fever, chills, muscular aches and pains,
severe headache, hepato- and/or splenomegaly, and gastrointestinal
symptoms. Cardiac complications may involve endocarditis and myocarditis. Fatal cases were common in the preantibiotic era. As a result
of quarantine of imported birds and improved veterinary-hygienic
measures, outbreaks and sporadic cases of psittacosis are now rare.
Severe pneumonia requiring management in an intensive care unit
may develop. Endocarditis, hepatitis, and neurologic complications
may occur, and fatal cases have been reported. The incubation period
is usually 5–19 days but can last as long as 28 days.
■ DIAGNOSIS
Previously, the most widely used serologic test for diagnosing chlamydial infections was the genus-specific CF test, in which assay of paired
serum specimens often shows fourfold or greater increases in antibody
titer. The CF test remains useful, but the gold standard of serologic
tests is now the MIF test, which is not widely available (see section
on diagnosis of C. trachomatis genital infection, above). Any antibody
titer above 1:16 is considered significant evidence of exposure to
chlamydiae, and a fourfold titer rise in paired sera in combination with
a clinically compatible syndrome can be used to diagnose psittacosis.
Some commercially available serologic tests based on measurement of
antibodies to LPS can be useful when the clinical diagnosis is consistent with bird exposure; however, since these tests are reactive for all
chlamydiae (i.e., all chlamydiae contain LPS), caution must be used in
their interpretation. C. psittaci is now considered a biohazard category
A biothreat agent and has been associated with laboratory-acquired
infections. The CDC does not recommend testing for this agent when
psittacosis is suspected, especially by culture.
TREATMENT
Psittacosis
The antibiotic of choice is tetracycline; the dosage for adults is 250 mg
four times a day, continued for at least 3 weeks to avoid relapse.
Severely ill patients may need cardiovascular and respiratory support. Erythromycin (500 mg four times a day by mouth) is an
alternative therapy.
C. PNEUMONIAE INFECTIONS
C. pneumoniae is a common cause of human respiratory diseases, such
as pneumonia and bronchitis. This organism reportedly accounts for
as many as 10% of cases of community-acquired pneumonia, most of
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