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A-K Hurtig a STD Section, HIV and STD Division, Public Health
Laboratory Service Communicable Disease Surveillance Centre, London NW9
5EQ, b British Cooperative Clinical Group, Department of
Genitourinary Medicine, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2QQ, c Department of Paediatrics, St Mary's Hospital, London W2
1NY
Correspondence to: Dr Nicoll anicoll{at}phls.co.uk
Objective:
To measure the incidence of syphilis
detected in pregnancy and congenital syphilis in the United Kingdom.
Design:
Surveys through consultants in genitourinary medicine and paediatricians with active surveillance.
Setting:
United Kingdom, 1994-7.
Subjects:
Women treated for syphilis in pregnancy, and children with early congenital syphilis born in the United Kingdom.
Results:
Over 3 years 139 women were diagnosed with and treated for syphilis in pregnancy; 121 were detected through antenatal screening. Thirty one had confirmed or probable congenitally transmissible syphilis, putting their pregnancies at risk. These were
minimum figures but are compatible with the 90 to 100 women newly
diagnosed annually as having infectious or early latent syphilis. A
universal screening policy would require 18 600 and 55 700 women
(maximum numbers) to be screened, respectively, to detect one woman
needing treatment and to prevent one case of congenital syphilis. Nine
presumptive cases of children with congenital syphilis born in the
United Kingdom were reported. Mothers requiring treatment for syphilis
were found in almost every health region but were more prevalent in
London and the south east. Being born abroad and belonging to an ethnic
minority group were strong risk factors, but 14% (19 of 121) of cases
treated and six of 31 definite or probably transmissible cases occurred
in white women born in the United Kingdom.
Conclusions:
Congenitally transmissible syphilis
continues to occur among pregnant women in the United Kingdom. Cases
would be missed and stillbirths and congenitally infected babies would occur if antenatal screening was abandoned.
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