Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://dora.health.qld.gov.au/qldresearchjspui/handle/1/5488
Title: Clinical signs of trachoma and laboratory evidence of ocular Chlamydia trachomatis infection in a remote Queensland community: a serial cross-sectional study
Authors: Lynch, Kathleen 
Morotti, Wendy
Brian, Garry
Ketchup, Lenore
Kingston, Kozue
Starr, Mitchell
Ware, Robert S
Everill, Beth
Asgar, Nazihah
O'Keefe, Anne
Whop, Lisa J 
Kaldor, John M
Lambert, Stephen 
Issue Date: 21-Nov-2022
Publisher: Wiley-Blackwell
Journal: The Medical journal of Australia
Abstract: To compare the findings of standard clinical assessments and of complementary clinical and laboratory methods for determining whether community-wide treatment for trachoma is warranted in a remote Queensland community. Three cross-sectional screening surveys, 2019-2021, complemented by laboratory pathology testing. Small community in northwest Queensland with geographic and cultural ties to Northern Territory communities where trachoma persists. Children aged 1-14 years; opportunistic screening of people aged 15 years or more. Prevalence of clinical signs of trachoma, Chlamydia trachomatis infection, ocular non-chlamydial infections, and seropositivity for antibodies to the C. trachomatis Pgp3 protein. During the three surveys, 73 examinations of 58 children aged 1-4 years, 309 of 171 aged 5-9 years, and 142 of 105 aged 10-14 years for trachoma were undertaken, as were 171 examinations of 164 people aged 15 years or more; 691 of 695 examinations were of Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander people (99%), 337 were of girls or young women (48%). Clinical signs consistent with trachomatous inflammation-follicular were identified in 5-9-year-old children 23 times (7%), including in eleven with non-chlamydial infections and one with a C. trachomatis infection. One child (10-14 years) met the criteria for trachomatous scarring. Two of 272 conjunctival swab samples (all ages) were polymerase chain reaction-positive for C. trachomatis (0.7%). Two of 147 people aged 15 years or more examined in 2019 had trichiasis, both aged 40 years or more. Seven of 53 children aged 1-9 years in 2019 and seven of 103 in 2021 were seropositive for anti-Pgp3 antibodies. Despite the prevalence of clinical signs consistent with trachomatous inflammation-follicular among 5-9-year-old children exceeding the 5% threshold for community-wide treatment, laboratory testing indicated that childhood exposure to ocular C. trachomatis is rare in this community. Laboratory testing should be integrated into Australian trachoma guidelines.
DOI: 10.5694/mja2.51735
metadata.dc.rights.holder: Lenore Ketchup
Keywords: Trachoma;Chlamydia trachomatis;Rural Queensland;Australian Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Peoples;Pediatrics
Type: Article
Appears in Sites:North West HHS Publications

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