a b s t r a c t a r t i c l e i n f oKeywords: Antenatal care Congenital syphilis Penicillin Rapid syphilis tests Objective: To evaluate the impact of rapid syphilis tests (RSTs) on syphilis testing and treatment in pregnant women in Kalomo District, Zambia. Methods: In March 2012, health workers at all 35 health facilities in Kalomo Distract were trained in RST use and penicillin treatment. In March 2013, data were retrospectively abstracted from 18 randomly selected health facilities and stratified into three time intervals: baseline (6 months prior to RST introduction), midline (0-6 months after RST introduction), and endline (7-12 months after RST introduction). Results: Data collected on 4154 pregnant women showed a syphilis-reactive seroprevalence of 2.7%. The proportion of women screened improved from baseline (140/1365, 10.6%) to midline (976/1446, 67.5%), finally decreasing at endline (752/1337, 56.3%) (P b 0.001). There was no significant difference in the proportion of syphilis-seroreactive pregnant women who received 1 dose of penicillin before (1/2, 50%) or after (5/48, 10.4%; P = 0.199) RST introduction with low treatment rates throughout. Conclusion: With RST scale-up in Zambia and other resource-limited settings, same-day test and treatment with penicillin should be prioritized to achieve the goal of eliminating congenital syphilis. © 2015 World Health Organization; licensee Elsevier. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
BackgroundGlobally, it is estimated that approximately 1.4 million annual cases of syphilis occur during pregnancy [1]. A recent meta-analysis demonstrated that, among asymptomatic, untreated pregnant women with syphilis, fetal loss and stillbirth, neonatal deaths, and prematurity/low birth weight were 21%, 9.3%, and 5.8%, respectively, more frequent when compared with women without syphilis [2]. Treatment of syphilis-seroreactive pregnant women with 1 dose of intramuscular penicillin at least 30 days prior to delivery reduces the risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes to that of a non-infected mother, although full treatment of latent maternal syphilis requires three doses of intramuscular penicillin [3][4][5]. However, modeling data suggest that less than 10% of women with syphilis during pregnancy are screened and appropriately treated [1], despite the 2007 World Health Organization's Global Elimination of Congenital Syphilis initiative goals of testing more than 90% of pregnant women and of treating more than 90% of those who are seroreactive by 2015 [6].Recently-developed rapid syphilis tests (RST; BIOLINE, Korea) have a high sensitivity (85.7% to 100%) and specificity (96% to 100%), and do not require the traditional laboratory infrastructure used for rapid plasma reagin (RPR) tests [7][8][9]. Previous studies have suggested increased syphilis screening post-RST implementation, but longerterm evaluation of screening rates after initial training is needed [10]. In March 2012, the Elizabeth Glaser Pediat...