Abstract

Around the middle of the twentieth century, specialist services began routinely screening asymptomatic men with a urethral smear for gram staining. The practice persists in over 90% of United Kingdom services in line with national guidelines.1 If the smear reveals ≥5 polymorphs in five or more oil-immersion fields then a diagnosis of non-gonococcal urethritis (NGU) is made, despite the absence of symptoms or a specific pathogen. Some will even fish out threads or debris from an asymptomatic man’s first-void urine and stain these, in this case looking for ≥10 polymorphs/oil-immersion field. An alternative is a leucocyte esterase test on the urine. Thus (arbitrarily) a new disease was created; necessitating counselling, antibiotic treatment, contact tracing, and frequent psychosocial dilemmas. The Americans generally go easy on the tracing of contacts of cases of asymptomatic NGU in the absence of a specific organism (C. trachomatis) being documented.2 While agreeing on the microscopic criteria for asymptomatic urethritis, in contrast to the UK neither the American nor the Australian guidelines advocate urethral smears for microscopy for asymptomatic men, though neither guidelines actually advise against the practice.3,4 Perhaps technology has advanced to the point where this time-consuming and often problematic diagnosis of asymptomatic non-chlamydial, non-gonococcal urethritis (NCNGU) (and its active pursuit in the clinic) needs to be reappraised. First, we need to ask why did the practice start in the first place? After glancing over their shoulders, a few senior UK genitourinary physicians have intimated their sceptical view that the process was devised ‘to keep the statistics up in the clinics’. By the 1950s, the introduction of penicillin had made large inroads into the major concerns of the time — gonorrhoea and syphilis. The tactic worked. NGU filled the gap and the comprehensive network of UK clinics was preserved. In the meantime, in the USA, the practice did not become as widespread and much of their clinical network was de-funded. But these days the UK clinics are straining under a massive and growing clinical burden— yet more reason to question a traditional practice with a fading rationale. Second, therewas a strong hunch (confirmed by the 1970s) that NGU often indicated an important infection (namely C. trachomatis) with serious consequences for sexual partners, and chlamydial urethritis is commonly asymptomatic. At the time (in the absence of any other test for C. trachomatis infection) this provided a compelling argument for screening for asymptomatic NGU. However, these days, a specific test for C. trachomatis is part of the routine work-up in specialist services,1 so all the urethral smear now contributes is the diagnosis of asymptomatic NCNGU. Additionally, as control programmes take effect, C. trachomatis tends to contribute shrinking proportions (typically< 20%) of acute NGU cases and even smaller proportions of asymptomatic NGU cases.2 The only consistently documented causes of NCNGU are Mycoplasma genitalium5 and Trichomonas vaginalis6 [the latter largely confined to areas of high prevalence (Table 1)] but we don’t routinely test for these organisms. The reasons that we don’t screen for these infections are because the pathogenicity ofM. genitalium has been unclear until recently5 while T. vaginalis tends to be uncommon in those services that can afford to test for it. There may be a scattering of other specific causes of NCNGU (Table 2)7−11 but there is no debate that we don’t know the cause of most cases. Thus we find ourselves in the odd predicament of having constructed and been required to manage an asymptomatic condition with generally no known cause and no known consequences. Some may chose to continue the practice of urethral smears with the justification that a sinister (as yet undiscovered) pathogen is lurking in the urethrae of thesemen and that they wouldn’t otherwise get treated. But the treatments most commonly used for NGU or NCNGU in the public sectors in the UK and the USA (tetracyclines) have no effect on T. vaginalis and, on preliminary experience, a

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.