Journal article

Repeat infections with chlamydia in women may be more transcriptionally active with lower responses from some immune genes

WM Huston, A Lawrence, BA Wee, M Thomas, P Timms, LA Vodstrcil, A McNulty, R McIvor, K Worthington, B Donovan, S Phillips, MY Chen, CK Fairley, JS Hocking

Frontiers in Public Health | Published : 2022

Abstract

Chlamydia trachomatis, the most common bacterial sexually transmitted infection worldwide, is responsible for considerable health burden due to its significant sequelae. There are growing concerns about chlamydial treatment and management due to widely documented increasing burden of repeat infections. In the current study, a cohort study design of 305 women with urogenital chlamydial infections demonstrated that 11.8% of women experienced repeat infections after treatment with azithromycin. The chlamydial DNA load measured by quantitative PCR was higher in women who experienced a repeat infection (p = 0.0097) and repeat infection was associated with sexual contact. There was no genomic or p..

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