As Prevention Strategy for Sexually Transmitted Infections Rolls Out, Experts Highlight both Promise and Knowledge Gaps

DoxyPEP is reducing the rate of syphilis and chlamydia but has had little to no effect on gonorrhea and needs close monitoring for antibiotic resistance.

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Philip P. Adams, Ph.D.

Contact: philip.adams@nih.gov

Education:

Ph.D., 2017, Biomedical Sciences, University of Central Florida, FL
B.S., 2012, Biology, Summa Cum Laude, West Virginia Wesleyan College, WV

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NIH Funds Three Syphilis Diagnostics Projects

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University of Washington School of Medicine
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NIH Funds Three Syphilis Diagnostics Projects
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Randomized Directly Observed Therapy Study to Interpret Clinical Trials of Doxy-PEP

The objective of this study is to use the identified techniques to help interpret the Kenyan dPEP study, and to examine the relative performance of these methods within the United States DoxyPEP trial, establishing adherence metrics for current and future rollout studies of doxycycline post-exposure prophylaxis.

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Office/Contact: Matthew A Spinelli, MD, MAS
Email: matthew.spinelli@ucsf.edu
 

The Legacies of Walt Stamm

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The Legacies of Walt Stamm
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Sexually Transmitted Diseases

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Point-of-Care Diagnostics for Common Sexually Transmitted Infections

NIAID supported a clinical study of the Visby Medical Sexual Health Test, a palm-sized, rapid point-of-care diagnostic that can detect trichomoniasis, chlamydia, and gonorrhea infections in women using a self-collected vaginal swab. The highly sensitive, nucleic acid amplification-based PCR diagnostic returns results in less than 30 minutes, allowing patients to receive an accurate diagnosis during their initial visit.

Study Supports Expanded Testing for Gonorrhea and Chlamydia

A Novel Diagnostic Test for Syphilis

Duke Professor Jörn Coers Earns MERIT Award for Chlamydia Research

Emergency Department Screening More Than Doubles Detection of Syphilis Cases

Providing optional syphilis tests to most people seeking care at a large emergency department led to a dramatic increase in syphilis screening and diagnosis, according to study of nearly 300,000 emergency department encounters in Chicago. Most people diagnosed had no symptoms, which suggests that symptom-based testing strategies alone could miss opportunities to diagnose and treat people with syphilis.

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301-402-1663
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