The findings and conclusions in these presentations have not been formally disseminated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and should not be construed to represent any agency determination or policy.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008
P145

Syphilis and HIV Co-infection in New Mexico, 1998-2007

Kathleen Rooney, New Mexico Department of Health, 1190 St Francis Drive, Santa Fe, NM, USA and Sarah Valway, STD Program, New Mexico Department of Health, 1190 St. Francis Drive Suite S 1150, PO Box 26110, Santa Fe, NM, USA.


Background:
Since 2000, primary and secondary (PS) syphilis cases have increased in the U.S., predominantly among men who have sex with men (MSM), a group at high risk for HIV infection. Studies have shown syphilis facilitates HIV transmission and increases in early syphilis cases may indicate increased HIV transmission.

Objective:
Describe PS and Early Latent (PS&EL) syphilis cases in New Mexico (NM) who are coinfected with HIV.

Method:
PS&EL syphilis cases reported from January 1998 through June 2007 were reviewed and cross-matched with the NM HIV/AIDS registry to identify coinfected cases.

Result:
Of 832 reported PS&EL syphilis cases, 72 (8.7%) were coinfected with HIV at the time of their syphilis diagnosis. HIV infection was diagnosed >1 year before syphilis for 43 (59.7%) cases (mean 7.3yrs; range 1.2 – 22yrs). The percentage of coinfected cases by year ranged from 0-17% and, since 2001, 3-year moving averages show a steady increase from 2.3%-12.1%. Two of the six coinfected females were injection drug users (IDU); three had sex with HIV infected male partners. Of 66 coinfected males, 48 (72.7%) were MSM with no other risk factor identified; seven (10.6%) were MSM/IDU; and two heterosexual men reported sex with prostitutes. For 10 cases no risk factors were identified. Forty (55.6%) coinfected cases were diagnosed with P&S syphilis and 32 with EL syphilis: seven (9.7%) were also concurrently diagnosed with neurosyphilis.

Conclusion:
HIV coinfection among PS&EL syphilis cases in NM is increasing. Additional prevention efforts need to be made to change sexual behaviors to prevent the spread of syphilis and HIV.

Implications:
Syphilis/HIV coinfections have important implications for patient care (e.g., neurological evaluation and more frequent laboratory testing after syphilis treatment) and partner counseling. Public health programs should cross-match syphilis and HIV/AIDS registries and provide comprehensive partner counseling and referral services for all syphilis cases.