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      Estudio ecológico de la sífilis gestacional y congénita en Colombia, 2012-2018 Translated title: Estudo ecológico da sífilis gestacional e congénita na Colombia, 2012-2018 Translated title: Ecological study of gestational and congenital syphilis in Colombia, 2012-2018

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          Abstract

          Resumen Objetivos: Describir el comportamiento de la sífilis gestacional y congénita en Colombia, entre el 2012 y 2018, a partir de registro de notificación Nacional. Materiales y Métodos: Estudio ecológi co, exploratorio a partir de Notificaciones al sistema de vigilancia de salud Pública. Se estimaron la tasa de incidencia y la razón de prevalencia para cada departamento. Se establecieron cada una las estimaciones según rangos, para los 33 departamentos eva luados y se expresaron en mapas a escala de grises según tasas y razones evaluadas. Además, se presentan curvas epidemiológi cas por semanas notificación para sífilis gestacional y congénita. Resultados: Arauca, Santander, Cesar y Caldas, presentaron el mayor incremento entre 2012 y 2018 para sífilis gestacional. Para el mismo periodo, Santander, Casanare y Amazonas presentaron un aumento para sífilis Congénita, mientras que en los demás de partamentos se evidenció una disminución en los eventos. Se en contraron diferencias significativas en el reporte de casos entre un año y otro, para el país, en ambos eventos (p< 0,001). Conclusiones: En Colombia se encontró un aumento de sífilis gestacional, mientras, para sífilis congénita existió variabilidad con tendencia a aumentar en los últimos años.

          Translated abstract

          Resumo Objetivos: Descrever o comportamento da sífilis gestacional e congenita na Colombia entre 2012 e 2018, com base nos registros nacionais de notificado. Materiais e Método: Estudo ecológico, exploratório, baseado em notificares ao sistema de vigilancia sanitária pública. A taxa de incidencia e a taxa de prevalencia foram estimadas para cada departamento. As estimativas foram estabelecidas de acordo com intervalos para os 33 departamentos avaliados e expressas em mapas em escala de cinza, de acordo com as taxas e rácios avaliados. Além disso, curvas epidemiológicas por semanas de notificado sao apresentadas para sífilis gestacional e congenita. Resultados: Arauca, Santander, Cesar e Caldas apresentaram o maior aumento entre 2012 e 2018 para a sífilis gestacional. No mesmo período, Santander, Casanare e Amazonas mostraram um aumento para a sífilis congenita, enquanto os outros departamentos mostraram uma diminuido nos eventos. Foram encontradas diferengas significativas no relato de casos de um ano para o outro, para o país, em ambos os eventos (p<0,001). Conclusóes: Na Colombia, houve um aumento da sífilis gestacional, enquanto para a sífilis congenita houve variabilidade com tendencia a aumentar nos últimos anos.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract Objective: To describe the behavior of pregnancy and congenital syphilis in Colombia between 2012 and 2018 according to national notifications records. Materials and Methods: An ecological exploratory study was conducted based on notifications to the public health surveillance system. The incidence rate and prevalence ratio were estimated for each department. Each estimate was established per ranges for 33 departments evaluated and expressed in grayscale maps based on rates and ratios evaluated. Epidemic curves by week of notification for pregnancy and congenital syphilis are also shown. Results: Arauca, Santander, Cesar and Caldas had the highest increase in pregnancy syphilis between 2012 and 2018 while Santander, Casanare and Amazonas had an increase in congenital syphilis during the same period. Other departments had a decrease in these events. Significant differences were found in case reporting from year to year in both events in the country (p<0.001). Conclusions: In Colombia, an increase in pregnancy syphilis was found while a variability with an increasing trend was found for congenital syphilis in recent years.

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          Untreated maternal syphilis and adverse outcomes of pregnancy: a systematic review and meta-analysis

          OBJECTIVE: To perform a systematic review and meta-analysis of reported estimates of adverse pregnancy outcomes among untreated women with syphilis and women without syphilis. METHODS: PubMed, EMBASE and Cochrane Libraries were searched for literature assessing adverse pregnancy outcomes among untreated women with seroreactivity for Treponema pallidum infection and non-seroreactive women. Adverse pregnancy outcomes were fetal loss or stillbirth, neonatal death, prematurity or low birth weight, clinical evidence of syphilis and infant death. Random-effects meta-analyses were used to calculate pooled estimates of adverse pregnancy outcomes and, where appropriate, heterogeneity was explored in group-specific analyses. FINDINGS: Of the 3258 citations identified, only six, all case-control studies, were included in the analysis. Pooled estimates showed that among untreated pregnant women with syphilis, fetal loss and stillbirth were 21% more frequent, neonatal deaths were 9.3% more frequent and prematurity or low birth weight were 5.8% more frequent than among women without syphilis. Of the infants of mothers with untreated syphilis, 15% had clinical evidence of congenital syphilis. The single study that estimated infant death showed a 10% higher frequency among infants of mothers with syphilis. Substantial heterogeneity was found across studies in the estimates of all adverse outcomes for both women with syphilis (66.5% [95% confidence interval, CI: 58.0-74.1]; I²=91.8%; P<0.001) and women without syphilis (14.3% [95% CI: 11.8-17.2]; I²=95.9%; P<0.001). CONCLUSION: Untreated maternal syphilis is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. These findings can inform policy decisions on resource allocation for the detection of syphilis and its timely treatment in pregnant women.
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            Congenital syphilis

            Congenital syphilis remains a major public health problem worldwide, and its incidence is increasing in the United States. This review highlights the ongoing problem of this preventable infection, and discusses vertical transmission and clinical manifestations while providing a practical algorithm for the evaluation and management of infants born to mothers with reactive serologic tests for syphilis. Every case of congenital syphilis must be seen as a failure of our public health system to provide optimal prenatal care to pregnant women, as congenital syphilis can be prevented by early and repeated prenatal serologic screening of mothers and penicillin treatment of infected women, their sexual partners, and their newborn infants.
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              Missed Opportunities for Prevention of Congenital Syphilis — United States, 2018

              Congenital syphilis is an infection with Treponema pallidum in an infant or fetus, acquired during pregnancy from a mother with untreated or inadequately treated syphilis. Congenital syphilis can cause miscarriage, stillbirth, or early infant death, and infected infants can experience lifelong physical and neurologic problems. Although timely identification and treatment of maternal syphilis during pregnancy can prevent congenital syphilis ( 1 , 2 ), the number of reported congenital syphilis cases in the United States increased 261% during 2013–2018, from 362 to 1,306. Among reported congenital syphilis cases during 2018, a total of 94 resulted in stillbirths or early infant deaths ( 3 ). Using 2018 national congenital syphilis surveillance data and a previously developed framework ( 4 ), CDC identified missed opportunities for congenital syphilis prevention. Nationally, the most commonly missed prevention opportunities were a lack of adequate maternal treatment despite the timely diagnosis of syphilis (30.7%) and a lack of timely prenatal care (28.2%), with variation by geographic region. Congenital syphilis prevention involves syphilis prevention for women and their partners and timely identification and treatment of pregnant women with syphilis. Preventing continued increases in congenital syphilis requires reducing barriers to family planning and prenatal care, ensuring syphilis screening at the first prenatal visit with rescreening at 28 weeks’ gestation and at delivery, as indicated, and adequately treating pregnant women with syphilis ( 2 ). Congenital syphilis prevention strategies that implement tailored public health and health care interventions to address missed opportunities can have substantial public health impact. Congenital syphilis is a reportable condition in all 50 states and the District of Columbia and is nationally notifiable; case reports are sent voluntarily to CDC through the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System. According to the congenital syphilis surveillance case definition, congenital syphilis is 1) a condition affecting stillbirths and infants born to mothers with untreated or inadequately treated syphilis regardless of signs in the infant or 2) a condition affecting an infant with clinical evidence of congenital syphilis including direct detection of Treponema pallidum or a reactive nontreponemal syphilis test with signs on physical examination, radiographs, or cerebrospinal fluid analysis ( 3 ). Rates of congenital syphilis mirror rates of primary and secondary syphilis among women of reproductive age, which approximately doubled during 2014–2018 ( 3 ). Adequate maternal treatment is defined as completion of a penicillin-based regimen recommended for the mother’s stage of syphilis initiated ≥30 days before delivery ( 2 ). For this analysis, all congenital syphilis prevention opportunities are considered timely if they occurred ≥30 days before delivery, per the surveillance case definition ( 3 ). Demographic and clinical characteristics of infants and their mothers were analyzed using Stata statistical software (version 11; StataCorp). On the basis of CDC’s congenital syphilis prevention framework, each congenital syphilis case was assigned to one of four mutually exclusive missed opportunity categories based on the mother’s prenatal care, testing, and treatment history: 1) lack of timely prenatal care with no timely syphilis testing; 2) lack of timely syphilis testing despite timely prenatal care; 3) lack of adequate maternal treatment despite a timely syphilis diagnosis;* or 4) late identification of seroconversion during pregnancy (identified 41% of mothers of infants with congenital syphilis lacked timely prenatal care, and >29% lacked adequate treatment despite receipt of a timely syphilis diagnosis. TABLE 3 Missed congenital syphilis prevention opportunities among mothers of infants with congenital syphilis in the South and West U.S. Census regions,* by race/ethnicity † — United States, 2018 Missed prevention opportunity Census region and race/ethnicity
No. (%§) South West White Black Hispanic White Black Hispanic No timely prenatal care and no timely syphilis testing 37 (31.6) 68 (19.7) 26 (13.0) 56 (43.1) 37 (43.0) 81 (41.8) No timely syphilis testing despite receipt of timely prenatal care 7 (6.0) 26 (7.5) 14 (7.0) 17 (13.1) 6 (7.0) 23 (11.9) No adequate maternal treatment despite a timely syphilis diagnosis 28 (23.9) 128 (37.0) 74 (37.0) 38 (29.2) 26 (30.2) 57 (29.4) Late identification of seroconversion during pregnancy¶ 18 (15.4) 34 (9.8) 19 (9.5) 7 (5.4) 4 (4.7) 14 (7.2) Missed prevention opportunity not identified Clinical evidence of congenital syphilis despite adequate maternal treatment completion** 5 (4.3) 17 (4.9) 9 (4.5) 3 (2.3) 2 (2.3) 2 (1.0) Insufficient information†† 22 (18.8) 73 (21.1) 58 (29.0) 9 (6.9) 11 (12.8) 17 (8.8) Total 117 346 200 130 86 194 * South: Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia, and West Virginia; West: Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming. † White and black mothers were non-Hispanic; Hispanic mothers might be of any race. § Percentages might not sum to 100 because of rounding. ¶ Must have had negative syphilis test early in pregnancy and a positive syphilis test <30 days before delivery, at day of delivery, or ≤90 days after delivery to be classified as having a seroconversion during pregnancy. ** Infant indications of infection include direct detection of Treponema pallidum by dark field microscopy or special stains; a reactive nontreponemal test and any one of these signs or symptoms of congenital syphilis: condyloma lata, snuffles, syphilitic rash, hepatosplenomegaly, jaundice/hepatitis, pseudoparalysis, or edema on physical exam; long bone radiograph findings consistent with congenital syphilis; abnormal protein or white blood cell count in the cerebrospinal fluid; reactive venereal disease research laboratory test in the cerebrospinal fluid. †† Insufficient information submitted to CDC related to maternal prenatal care, testing, or treatment to categorize. Discussion Nationally, the most commonly missed opportunity for preventing congenital syphilis was lack of adequate maternal treatment, likely driven by the high numbers of cases in the South, where this missed opportunity was most prevalent. The most common missed opportunities for preventing congenital syphilis differed by geographic region. In the West, a lack of timely prenatal care was the most commonly missed opportunity, and in the Northeast, late identification of seroconversion was the most common. Regional clinical and demographic differences in mothers of infants with congenital syphilis indicate that different populations are at increased risk and might require different interventions. The high proportion of mothers with early syphilis in certain regions signals recent heterosexual transmission and the potential for future increases in congenital syphilis cases if no intervention occurs. The high proportions of symptomatic and stillborn infants in certain regions might be related to early syphilis among their mothers, given that higher rates of vertical transmission and worse infant outcomes are associated with early syphilis during pregnancy ( 5 ). Published analyses of state-level data demonstrate additional heterogeneity in prevalences of missed opportunities and priority interventions. Repeat syphilis testing early in the third trimester was recently identified as the main intervention for preventing congenital syphilis in Florida, Louisiana, and New York City ( 6 , 7 ). A review of recent congenital syphilis cases in Indiana found that social vulnerabilities, including homelessness, substance abuse, and incarceration, were barriers to receiving timely diagnosis and treatment, despite provider adherence to CDC guidelines ( 8 ). A California study of missed opportunities for prevention of congenital syphilis identified gaps in multiple steps of the prevention cascade and found that early prenatal care is critical to preventing congenital syphilis and that multifaceted efforts are needed ( 9 ). Establishment of congenital syphilis case review boards in Louisiana identified specific missed opportunities, including lack of screening and treatment delay ( 10 ). These data support the need for tailored interventions based on local epidemiology and analysis of missed prevention opportunities. A national congenital syphilis prevention strategy requires prioritizing interventions to address the root causes of missed opportunities while maximizing the impact of finite resources. Interventions are needed for identifying pregnant women with syphilis outside of prenatal care and for reducing barriers to prenatal care for all women. Ensuring timely follow-up of positive syphilis test results for pregnant women and reducing barriers to adequate syphilis treatment for pregnant women and their partners can prevent congenital syphilis cases. Syphilis screening for all pregnant women at the first prenatal visit with repeat screening at 28 weeks and at delivery for women in high prevalence areas or who are at increased risk for acquisition can further reduce congenital syphilis and its associated morbidity. These interventions require collaboration among public health authorities, health care organizations and providers, and policymakers. Jurisdictions can establish congenital syphilis case review boards that can identify local prevention failures and explore solutions. The differences in missed opportunities noted among regions and among racial/ethnic groups within regions demonstrate that tailored prevention efforts are needed. The findings in this report are subject to at least three limitations. First, U.S. jurisdictions have different processes for congenital syphilis case investigation and reporting, and congenital syphilis investigations can be time-consuming and complicated. Inaccurate or incomplete data can lead to misclassification of missed prevention opportunity categories and might have magnified observed regional differences. Second, case report data provide limited information regarding each infant with congenital syphilis and each mother of an infant with congenital syphilis; this can lead to underascertainment of such factors as seroconversion. Finally, national congenital syphilis case report data do not contain information regarding social determinants of health such as maternal substance use; thus, this analysis cannot address the multifactorial barriers to accessing prenatal care and receiving adequate treatment. Congenital syphilis prevention requires syphilis prevention for women and their sex partners and timely identification and treatment of pregnant women with syphilis. Improving access to prenatal care and family planning for all women can improve rates of congenital syphilis as well as many other maternal and child health outcomes. Regional differences in the missed prevention opportunities indicate a need for different priorities for interventions that address root causes of congenital syphilis. Halting the continued increases and eventually eliminating congenital syphilis in the United States will require collaboration between public health and health care sectors, understanding missed prevention opportunities, and implementing tailored interventions accordingly. Summary What is already known about this topic? Timely identification and treatment of maternal syphilis can prevent congenital syphilis; however, the number of congenital syphilis cases in the United States increased 261% during 2013–2018. What is added by this report? Nationally, the most commonly missed opportunities for prevention of congenital syphilis are a lack of adequate maternal treatment despite timely diagnoses of syphilis (31%) and a lack of timely prenatal care (28%), followed by late identification of seroconversions (11%); prevalences of these missed opportunities differ regionally and by race/ethnicity. What are the implications for public health practice? Halting continued increases in congenital syphilis requires understanding the missed prevention opportunities and implementing tailored interventions based on local experience.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                cuid
                Revista Cuidarte
                Rev Cuid
                Programa de Enfermería, Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad de Santander UDES (Colombia, Santander, Colombia )
                2216-0973
                2346-3414
                April 2022
                : 13
                : 1
                : e20
                Affiliations
                [2] orgnameFundación Cardiovascular de Colombia Colombia jorgealso2@ 123456yahoo.com
                [1] orgnameSecretaría de Salud y Ambiente de Bucaramanga Colombia caroba23@ 123456hotmail.com
                [4] Bucaramanga Santander orgnameUniversidad Industrial de Santander Colombia jhonalecc22@ 123456outlook.com
                [3] Bucaramanga Santander orgnameUniversidad Industrial de Santander orgdiv1Escuela de Medicina orgdiv2Departamento de Salud Pública Colombia fabianmh1993@ 123456gmail.com
                Article
                S2216-09732022000100020 S2216-0973(22)01300100020
                10.15649/cuidarte.2326
                aa38ce35-b60d-4013-8fb9-c9d0cb8a9483

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 15 September 2021
                : 15 July 2021
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                SciELO Colombia

                Categories
                Artículo de Investigación

                Monitoramento Epidemiológico,Congenital,Syphilis,Monitoreo Epidemiológico,Atención Pre natal,Edad Gestacional,Sífilis Congénita,Cuidado Pré-Natal,Idade Gestacional,Sífilis Congenita,Epidemiological Monitoring,Prenatal Care,Gestational Age

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