避孕药具的使用和性传播感染的风险:系统回顾和当前观点。

IF 1.8 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Open access journal of contraception Pub Date : 2018-11-12 eCollection Date: 2018-01-01 DOI:10.2147/OAJC.S135439
Jennifer Deese, Subarna Pradhan, Hannah Goetz, Charles Morrison
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引用次数: 23

摘要

目的:关于避孕药使用与性传播感染(STIs)和细菌性阴道病(BV)风险之间关系的证据缺乏,前瞻性研究很少。我们在2006年和2009年发表的最新系统综述的基础上,系统地审查了过去10年关于避孕与性传播感染/细菌性传播感染之间关系的证据。方法:我们检索MEDLINE和POPLINE数据库,检索2008年1月1日至2018年1月31日期间发表的同行评审文章,这些文章报道了评估避孕使用与性传播感染事件和/或性传播感染事件或复发性传播感染之间关系的前瞻性研究。结果:对复方口服避孕药(COC)、醋酸甲孕酮(DMPA)、铜宫内节育器(Cu-IUD)、左炔诺孕酮宫内系统(LNG-IUS)等方法进行评价的文献共33篇。许多特定避孕方法/性传播感染相关的证据强度受到少数具有可比较明确的暴露和结果的前瞻性研究的限制。现有资料显示COCs与淋病奈瑟菌、阴道毛滴虫、HSV-2或梅毒无关联,与HPV、沙眼衣原体和BV的关联证据不一。对于DMPA,没有一项研究发现它与淋病奈索菌或梅毒有关联,沙眼衣原体、阴道衣原体、HPV和BV的数据是混合的。两项大型研究显示,使用DMPA可显著增加2型单纯疱疹病毒感染的风险。关于Cu-IUD和LNG-IUS对沙眼衣原体、淋病奈球菌和阴道T.感染的影响的数据很少,关于HPV和BV的数据混杂。结论:从前瞻性研究(包括随机试验)中获得的数据很少,无法得出关于避孕方法与特定性传播感染之间关系的有力结论。由于缺乏任何随机试验,很少发表前瞻性研究来分析这些关联,暴露定义和比较组的差异很大,由于不准确的性行为数据,不同的混杂因素调整以及研究人群和规模的差异,可能导致混淆,关于避孕措施使用与性传播感染/细菌性传播感染风险之间关联的总体证据受到限制。尽管存在这些局限性,但新的证据支持DMPA使用者感染HSV-2的风险显著增加,这需要进一步研究以更好地了解这种关联。
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Contraceptive use and the risk of sexually transmitted infection: systematic review and current perspectives.

Purpose: Evidence on the association between contraceptive use and risk of sexually transmitted infections (STIs) and bacterial vaginosis (BV) is lacking, with few prospective studies. We systematically reviewed the last 10 years' evidence on the association between contraception and STI/BV, building on the most recent systematic reviews published in 2006 and 2009.

Methods: We searched the MEDLINE and POPLINE databases for peer-reviewed articles p ublished between January 1, 2008 and January 31, 2018 reporting prospective studies that assessed the association between contraceptive use and incident STI and/or incident or recurrent BV.

Results: We identified 33 articles that evaluated combined oral contraceptives (COC), depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA), the copper intrauterine device (Cu-IUD), the levonorgestrel intrauterine system (LNG-IUS) and other methods. The strength of the evidence for many specific contraceptive method/STI associations is limited by few prospective studies with comparably defined exposures and outcomes. Available data suggest no association of COCs and Neisseria gonorrhoeae, Trichomonas vaginalis, HSV-2 or syphilis, and mixed evidence on the association with HPV, Chlamydia trachomatis, and BV. For DMPA, none of the studies identified found an association with N. gonorrhoeae or syphilis, and data on C. trachomatis, T. vaginalis, HPV and BV were mixed. Two large studies showed a highly clinically significant increased risk of HSV-2 infection with DMPA use. Data on the effect of Cu-IUD and the LNG-IUS on the acquisition of C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae and T. vaginalis are sparse, and data on HPV and BV are mixed.

Conclusion: Few data are available from prospective studies, including randomized trials, to draw strong conclusions about the relationships between contraceptive methods and specific STIs. The overall evidence on the association between contraceptive use and STI/BV risk is limited by the lack of any randomized trials, few published prospective studies designed to analyze these associations, wide variability in exposure definitions and comparator groups, potential for confounding due to inaccurate sexual behavior data, differential confounder adjustment and differences in study populations and sizes. Despite these limitations, new evidence is supportive of a significantly increased risk of HSV-2 infection among DMPA users which warrants additional research to better understand this association.

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