Childhood sexual abuse, alcohol problem scores, and race are associated with syphilis incidence in a prospective cohort of young sexual and gender minority adults assigned male at birth.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q3 INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Casey D Xavier Hall, Daniel T Ryan, Christina Hayford, Ethan Morgan, Richard D'Aquila, Brian Mustanski
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Syphilis rates in the United States have dramatically increased in recent years and are high among young men who have sex with men and transgender women. Yet, few studies have examined a wide-range of risk factors for syphilis incidence prospectively in young sexual and gender minority (YSGM) populations in the U.S. One framework which may have utility in understanding syphilis risk factors is syndemics, which focuses on co-morbid factors and their mutual influence. The current analysis examines demographic, comorbid health and socio-structural risk factors for syphilis in YSGM assigned male at birth including applying a syndemic framework.

Methods: Participants were part of a Chicago-based prospective cohort called RADAR (n = 738). All participants were YSGM. Syphilis cases were identified by serologic screening with a reverse-sequence testing algorithm. Risk factors included demographics, indicators of sexual risk, mental health, substance use, and violence victimization. Syndemic component score was calculated by adding the number of syndemic conditions. Analyses included multivariable logistic regressions.

Results: In multivariable predictive modeling, Black identity, childhood sexual abuse and alcohol problems predicted incident syphilis. Though roughly 37% of participants were indicated as having at least 2 syndemic conditions, the syndemic component did not predict syphilis incidence.

Conclusions: Syphilis incidence is high in this sample of YSGM. Additional research is needed to better understand mechanisms driving associations between childhood sexual abuse and syphilis incidence as well as to develop interventions improve testing and treatment among Black YSGM, YSGM who experience childhood sexual abuse, and YSGM who experience alcohol problems.

在一个前瞻性队列中,性少数群体和性别少数群体的年轻成年人在出生时被指定为男性,他们的童年性虐待、酗酒问题得分和种族与梅毒发病率有关。
背景:近年来,美国的梅毒发病率急剧上升,在男男性行为的年轻男性和变性女性中发病率很高。然而,很少有研究对美国年轻性和性别少数群体(YSGM)人群中梅毒发病率的广泛危险因素进行前瞻性研究。一个可能对了解梅毒危险因素有用的框架是综合征,它侧重于共病因素及其相互影响。目前的分析检查了YSGM指定男性出生时梅毒的人口统计学、共病健康和社会结构风险因素,包括应用综合症框架。方法:参与者是芝加哥前瞻性队列RADAR的一部分(n = 738)。所有参与者均为YSGM。采用反序检测算法进行血清学筛查,确定梅毒病例。风险因素包括人口统计、性风险指标、精神健康、药物使用和暴力受害。综合成分得分由综合条件个数相加计算。分析包括多变量逻辑回归。结果:在多变量预测模型中,黑人身份、儿童期性虐待和酗酒问题对梅毒的发生具有预测作用。虽然大约37%的参与者被指出至少有两种综合征,但综合征成分并不能预测梅毒的发病率。结论:该样本梅毒发病率较高。需要进一步的研究来更好地了解儿童期性虐待与梅毒发病率之间的关联机制,并制定干预措施,改善黑人、儿童期性虐待的YSGM和有酒精问题的YSGM的检测和治疗。
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来源期刊
Sexually transmitted diseases
Sexually transmitted diseases 医学-传染病学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
16.10%
发文量
289
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: ​Sexually Transmitted Diseases, the official journal of the American Sexually Transmitted Diseases Association​, publishes peer-reviewed, original articles on clinical, laboratory, immunologic, epidemiologic, behavioral, public health, and historical topics pertaining to sexually transmitted diseases and related fields. Reports from the CDC and NIH provide up-to-the-minute information. A highly respected editorial board is composed of prominent scientists who are leaders in this rapidly changing field. Included in each issue are studies and developments from around the world.
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