Abstract

In Ottawa, Canada, we initiated protocols to include non-serologic syphilis testing, as direct fluorescence antibody (DFA) for patients with syphilis symptoms. The purpose was to assess the ability of DFA to detect syphilis during acute infection and to determine if non-serologic testing could yield an increased number of syphilis diagnoses. We reviewed charts of patients of our local sexual health clinic for whom syphilis was suspected. A total of 69 clinical encounters were recorded for 67 unique patients, most of whom were male. The most common symptom was a painless genital lesion. Of the 67 patients, 29 were found to have a new syphilis diagnosis, among whom, 52% had positive syphilis serology and positive DFA, 34% had a positive syphilis serology and negative DFA, and 14% had negative syphilis serology and positive DFA. While DFA testing did not yield an abundance of new cases, it was useful to support findings from syphilis serology or confirm diagnosis where serology was negative. Where available, alternate non-serologic tests, such as nucleic acid amplification tests, should be considered above DFA due to its higher sensitivity for detecting syphilis in primary lesions; however, in clinical situations, when new syphilis infection is suspected, empiric treatment should not be delayed.

Highlights

  • The overall rate of syphilis in Ontario was 5.9/100,000 in 2010 and increased to 16.3/100,000 by 2019.1 For men, this change was from 11.3/100,000 in 2010 to 30.7/100,000 by 2019; for women, this rate rose from 0.7/100,000 in 2010 to 2.1/100,000 in 2019.1 These increased rates occurred in concordance with more people presenting for care with potential symptoms of primary syphilis

  • Focusing on the 29 patients with positive syphilis laboratory results, 52% (n = 15) had a positive direct fluorescence antibody (DFA) result with a positive syphilis serology, 34% (n = 10) had a negative DFA result with positive serology, and 14% (n = 4) had positive DFA with negative syphilis serology

  • We report on findings from an 18-month review of patients who presented to a sexual health clinic with symptoms suspicious of syphilis and completed serologic and non-serologic testing for syphilis, using a DFA

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Summary

Introduction

The overall rate of syphilis in Ontario was 5.9/100,000 in 2010 and increased to 16.3/100,000 by 2019.1 For men, this change was from 11.3/100,000 in 2010 to 30.7/100,000 by 2019; for women, this rate rose from 0.7/100,000 in 2010 to 2.1/100,000 in 2019.1 These increased rates occurred in concordance with more people presenting for care with potential symptoms of primary syphilis. We began collecting specimens for direct fluorescence antibody (DFA) testing from patients who presented to our sexual health clinic with symptoms suspicious for syphilis and tracked the results. We hoped DFA testing would improve our diagnostic capabilities to better identify primary syphilis to facilitate rapid treatment for patients and their sexual contacts and to strengthen local public health surveillance of infectious syphilis cases. In the early latent stage, patients are generally asymptomatic and only diagnosed with blood testing; relapses to the secondary phase occur in about 25% of early latent cases.[6] Following this 1-year period, syphilis transitions to a late latent phase, where the infection is considered noninfectious and non-transmissible to sexual partners. Syphilis can cause damage to the cardiovascular, neurologic, and integumentary systems, which in some cases can lead to irreversible health complications, such as vision or hearing loss, meningitis, or damage to the aorta.[5,6,7] For this reason, early identification and treatment of syphilis is prudent to reduce negative sequalae of infection

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