Swab-yourself trial with economic monitoring and testing for infections collectively (SYSTEMATIC): Part 1. A diagnostic accuracy, and cost-effectiveness, study comparing clinician-taken versus self-taken rectal and pharyngeal samples for the diagnosis of gonorrhoea and chlamydia
Wilson, JD; Wallace, HE; Loftus-Keeling, M; et al.Ward, H; Davies, B; Vargas-Palacios, A; Hulme, C; Wilcox, MH
Date: 2 September 2020
Article
Journal
Clinical Infectious Diseases
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP) / Infectious Diseases Society of America
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Background:
Urogenital testing misses extragenital Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) and Chlamydia
trachomatis (CT). Extragenital self-sampling is frequently undertaken despite no robust RCT
evidence of efficacy. We compared clinician-taken rectal and pharyngeal samples with selftaken samples for diagnostic accuracy and cost in MSM and ...
Background:
Urogenital testing misses extragenital Neisseria gonorrhoeae (NG) and Chlamydia
trachomatis (CT). Extragenital self-sampling is frequently undertaken despite no robust RCT
evidence of efficacy. We compared clinician-taken rectal and pharyngeal samples with selftaken samples for diagnostic accuracy and cost in MSM and females.
Methods:
Prospective, convenience, sample in UK sexual health clinic. Randomised order of clinician
and self-samples from pharynx and rectum, plus first catch urine (MSM) and vulvovaginal
swabs (females), for NG/CT detection.
Results:
Of 1793 participants (1284 females, 509 MSM), 116 had NG detected (75 urogenital site, 83
rectum, 72 pharynx); 9.4% infected females and 67.3% MSM were urogenital negative. 276
had CT detected (217 urogenital site, 249 rectum, 63 pharynx); 13.1% infected females and
71.8% MSM were urogenital negative. Sexual history did not identify those with rectal
infections. Clinician-rectal and self-rectal positive percent agreements (PPA) for NG
detection were 92.8% and 97.6%; clinician-rectal, and self-rectal PPA for CT detection were
95.6% and 97.2%. There was no difference in diagnostic accuracy between clinician and
self-taken samples.
Clinicians performed swabs quicker than participants so costs were lower. However, in
asymptomatic people, non-qualified clinicians would oversee self-swabbing and these costs
would be lower than clinician’s.
Conclusions:
There was no difference in diagnostic accuracy of clinician compared with self-taken
extragenital samples. Sexual history did not identify those with rectal infections so
individuals should have extragenital clinician, or self-taken, samples. Clinician swabs cost
less than self-swabs but in asymptomatic people, or doing home sampling, their costs would
be lower than clinician swabs.
Institute of Health Research
Collections of Former Colleges
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