Background. Syphilis is curable but Herpes Simplex Virus-2 (HSV-2) is not. As a result, the prevalence of syphilis but not HSV-2 may be influenced by the efficacy of national STI screening and treatment capacity. If the prevalence of syphilis and HSV-2 is found to be correlated, then this makes it more likely that something other than differential STI treatment is responsible for variations in the prevalence of both HSV-2 and syphilis. Methods. Simple linear regression was used to evaluate the relationship between national antenatal syphilis prevalence and HSV-2 prevalence in women in two time periods: 1990–1999 and 2008. Adjustments were performed for the laboratory syphilis testing algorithm used and the prevalence of circumcision. Results. The prevalence of syphilis was positively correlated with that of HSV-2 for both time periods (adjusted correlations, 20–24-year-olds: 1990–99: R 2 = 0.54 , P < 0.001 ; 2008: R 2 = 0.41 , P < 0.001 and 40–44-year-olds: 1990–99: R 2 = 0.42 , P < 0.001 ; 2008: R 2 = 0.49 , P < 0.001 ). Conclusion. The prevalence of syphilis and HSV-2 is positively correlated. This could be due to a common set of risk factors underpinning both STIs.
CITATION STYLE
Kenyon, C. R., Tsoumanis, A., & Osbak, K. (2016). Strong Country Level Correlation between Syphilis and HSV-2 Prevalence. Journal of Sexually Transmitted Diseases, 2016, 1–6. https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/5959032
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