Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases

BACKGROUND: The incidence of syphilis is rising all over the world, partly due to the increased transmission in HIV patients and other high risk groups such as men who have sex with men Materials: This is a retrospective study carried out at Infectious Disease Service in Tirana, Albania. It aims to...

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Main Authors: Edjola Lulja, Najada Como, Arjan Harxhi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-12-01
Series:Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716524004132
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author Edjola Lulja
Najada Como
Arjan Harxhi
author_facet Edjola Lulja
Najada Como
Arjan Harxhi
author_sort Edjola Lulja
collection DOAJ
description BACKGROUND: The incidence of syphilis is rising all over the world, partly due to the increased transmission in HIV patients and other high risk groups such as men who have sex with men Materials: This is a retrospective study carried out at Infectious Disease Service in Tirana, Albania. It aims to assess the prevalence of HIV/syphilis co-infection and describe the epidemiological, clinical and therapeutic features of syphilis diagnosed among newly diagnosed HIV cases during 2023. RESULTS: Out of 100 patients diagnosed with HIV infection, 53 patients were tested at baseline and 15 cases (28.3%) were diagnosed with syphilis. All were male with average age of 38 years (21-58 years). 4 cases (26%) declared homosexual relationships. Median CD4 level at baseline was 280 cells/ul, 5 cases (36%) had CD4 < 200 cells, 11 cases had CD4 < 350 cells. 3 cases (20%) were presented as primary syphilis, 7 cases (47%) as secondary syphilis and 5 cases (33%) as latent. Clinical signs included primary chancre, inguinal lymphadenopathy, systemic lymphadenopathy, maculo-papular, nodular rash. In two cases uveitis was described. Diagnosis was made by serology tests where the highest titer of RPR was 1:64. Therapy was carried out by giving benzathine penicillin in 12 cases, oral doxycycline in 1 case and ceftriaxone in 2 cases. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of 28.3% of syphilis among newly diagnosed HIV cases indicates an emergency situation of this sexually transmitted infection. This requires a review of innovative public health strategies to control this re-emerging epidemic.
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spelling doaj-art-926d91c602e74cdda6ec80ca3dcaceab2025-08-20T02:43:38ZengElsevierJournal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance2213-71652024-12-0139737410.1016/j.jgar.2024.10.236Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV casesEdjola Lulja0Najada Como1Arjan Harxhi2Department of Infectious Disease, Medical University, Tirana, AlbaniaDepartment of Infectious Disease, Medical University, Tirana, AlbaniaDepartment of Infectious Disease, Medical University, Tirana, AlbaniaBACKGROUND: The incidence of syphilis is rising all over the world, partly due to the increased transmission in HIV patients and other high risk groups such as men who have sex with men Materials: This is a retrospective study carried out at Infectious Disease Service in Tirana, Albania. It aims to assess the prevalence of HIV/syphilis co-infection and describe the epidemiological, clinical and therapeutic features of syphilis diagnosed among newly diagnosed HIV cases during 2023. RESULTS: Out of 100 patients diagnosed with HIV infection, 53 patients were tested at baseline and 15 cases (28.3%) were diagnosed with syphilis. All were male with average age of 38 years (21-58 years). 4 cases (26%) declared homosexual relationships. Median CD4 level at baseline was 280 cells/ul, 5 cases (36%) had CD4 < 200 cells, 11 cases had CD4 < 350 cells. 3 cases (20%) were presented as primary syphilis, 7 cases (47%) as secondary syphilis and 5 cases (33%) as latent. Clinical signs included primary chancre, inguinal lymphadenopathy, systemic lymphadenopathy, maculo-papular, nodular rash. In two cases uveitis was described. Diagnosis was made by serology tests where the highest titer of RPR was 1:64. Therapy was carried out by giving benzathine penicillin in 12 cases, oral doxycycline in 1 case and ceftriaxone in 2 cases. CONCLUSIONS: The prevalence of 28.3% of syphilis among newly diagnosed HIV cases indicates an emergency situation of this sexually transmitted infection. This requires a review of innovative public health strategies to control this re-emerging epidemic.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716524004132HIVSyphilisco-infectionAlbania
spellingShingle Edjola Lulja
Najada Como
Arjan Harxhi
Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
Journal of Global Antimicrobial Resistance
HIV
Syphilis
co-infection
Albania
title Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
title_full Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
title_fullStr Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
title_full_unstemmed Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
title_short Syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed HIV cases
title_sort syphilis frequency and features among newly diagnosed hiv cases
topic HIV
Syphilis
co-infection
Albania
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2213716524004132
work_keys_str_mv AT edjolalulja syphilisfrequencyandfeaturesamongnewlydiagnosedhivcases
AT najadacomo syphilisfrequencyandfeaturesamongnewlydiagnosedhivcases
AT arjanharxhi syphilisfrequencyandfeaturesamongnewlydiagnosedhivcases