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Analysis of 3 Algorithms for Syphilis Serodiagnosis and Implications for Clinical Management

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TLDR
The research supported use of the ECDC algorithm, in which syphilis screening begins with a treponemal immunoassay that is followed by a second, different trep onemal assay as a confirmatory test in high-prevalence populations, and indicated that nontreponemals assay is unnecessary for syphilis diagnosis but can be recommended for determining serological activity and the effect of syphilis treatment.
Abstract
Background. Algorithms for the diagnosis of syphilis continue to be a source of great controversy, and numerous test interpretations have perplexed many clinicians. Methods. We conducted a cross-sectional study of 24 124 subjects to analyze 3 syphilis testing algorithms: traditional algorithm, reverse algorithm, and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) algorithm. Every serum sample was simultaneously evaluated using the rapid plasma reagin, Treponema pallidum particle agglutination, and chemiluminescence immunoassay tests. With the results of clinical diagnoses of syphilis as a gold standard, we evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of the 3 syphilis testing algorithms. The κ coefficient was used to compare the concordance between the reverse algorithm and the ECDC algorithm. Results. Overall, 2749 patients in our cohort were diagnosed with syphilis. The traditional algorithm had the highest negative likelihood ratio (0.24), a missed diagnosis rate of 24.2%, and only 75.81% sensitivity. However, both the reverse and ECDC algorithms had higher diagnostic efficacy than the traditional algorithm. Their sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy were 99.38%–99.85%, 99.98%–100.00%, and 99.93%–99.96%, respectively. Moreover, the overall percentage of agreement and κ value between the reverse and the ECDC algorithms were 99.9% and 0.996, respectively. Conclusions. Our research supported use of the ECDC algorithm, in which syphilis screening begins with atreponemal immunoassay that is followed by a second, different treponemal assay as a confirmatory test in highprevalence populations. In addition, our results indicated that nontreponemal assay is unnecessary for syphilis diagnosis but can be recommended for determining serological activity and the effect of syphilis treatment.

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Recent Trends in the Serologic Diagnosis of Syphilis

TL;DR: Current tests are reviewed and current controversies in syphilis diagnosis are discussed, with a focus on serologic tests.
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2020 European guideline on the management of syphilis.

TL;DR: The 2020 edition of the European guideline on the management of syphilis is an update of the 2014 edition.
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Incidence and Risk Factors for the Prozone Phenomenon in Serologic Testing for Syphilis in a Large Cohort

TL;DR: TheProzone phenomenon in the RPR test was associated with the phase of syphilis, pregnancy, and neurosyphilis as well as a range of RPR titers between 1:8 and 1:512, in contrast to previous reports that the prozone phenomenon is associated with very high RPR Titers.
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Syphilis testing, typing, and treatment follow-up: a new era for an old disease.

TL;DR: Clinicians should be aware of testing strategies employed by their laboratories to ensure optimal sensitivity and specificity and local available T. pallidum PCR assays may improve the diagnosis of early disease and inform antibiotic choice.
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Traditional versus reverse syphilis algorithms: A comparison at a large academic medical center.

TL;DR: In this study at an academic medical center, the reverse algorithm had significantly more total positive screens than the traditional algorithm, and produced equivalent rates of active infection.
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