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Accelerated partner therapy (APT) partner notification for people with Chlamydia trachomatis: Protocol for the Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity (LUSTRUM) APT cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial

Accelerated partner therapy (APT) partner notification for people with Chlamydia trachomatis: Protocol for the Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity (LUSTRUM) APT cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial
Accelerated partner therapy (APT) partner notification for people with Chlamydia trachomatis: Protocol for the Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity (LUSTRUM) APT cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial
Introduction Partner notification (PN) is a process aiming to identify, test and treat the sex partners of people (index patients) with sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Accelerated partner therapy (APT) is a PN method whereby healthcare professionals assess sex partners, by telephone consultation, before giving the index patient antibiotics and STI self-sampling kits to deliver to their sex partner(s). The Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity programme aims to determine the effectiveness of APT in heterosexual women and men with chlamydia and determine whether APT could affect Chlamydia trachomatis transmission at population level. Methods and analysis This protocol describes a cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial of APT, offered as an additional PN method, compared with standard PN. The trial is accompanied by an economic evaluation, transmission dynamic modelling and a qualitative process evaluation involving patients, partners and healthcare professionals. Clusters are 17 sexual health clinics in areas of England and Scotland with contrasting patient demographics. We will recruit 5440 heterosexual women and men with chlamydia, aged ≥16 years. The primary outcome is the proportion of index patients testing positive for C. trachomatis 12-16 weeks after the PN consultation. Secondary outcomes include: proportion of sex partners treated; cost effectiveness; model-predicted chlamydia prevalence; experiences of APT. The primary outcome analysis will be by intention-to-treat, fitting random effects logistic regression models that account for clustering of index patients within clinics and trial periods. The transmission dynamic model will be used to predict change in chlamydia prevalence following APT. The economic evaluation will use mathematical modelling outputs, taking a health service perspective. Qualitative data will be analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis and framework analysis. Ethics and dissemination This protocol received ethical approval from London-Chelsea Research Ethics Committee (18/LO/0773). Findings will be published with open access licences. Trial registration number ISRCTN15996256.
accelerated partner therapy, chlamydia, partner notification, RCT, STIs, transmission
2044-6055
Estcourt, Claudia S.
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Howarth, Alison R.
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Copas, Andrew
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Low, Nicola
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Mapp, Fiona
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Woode Owusu, Melvina
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Flowers, Paul
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Roberts, Tracy
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Mercer, Catherine H.
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Wayal, Sonali
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Symonds, Merle
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Nandwani, Rak
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Saunders, John
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Johnson, Anne M.
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Pothoulaki, Maria
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Althaus, Christian
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Pickering, Karen
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McKinnon, Tamsin
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Brice, Susannah
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Comer, Alex
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Tostevin, Anna
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Ogwulu, Chidubem Duby
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Vojt, Gabriele
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Cassell, Jackie A.
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Estcourt, Claudia S.
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Howarth, Alison R.
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Copas, Andrew
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Low, Nicola
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Mapp, Fiona
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Woode Owusu, Melvina
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Flowers, Paul
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Roberts, Tracy
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Mercer, Catherine H.
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Wayal, Sonali
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Symonds, Merle
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Nandwani, Rak
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Saunders, John
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Johnson, Anne M.
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Pothoulaki, Maria
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Althaus, Christian
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Pickering, Karen
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McKinnon, Tamsin
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Brice, Susannah
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Comer, Alex
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Tostevin, Anna
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Ogwulu, Chidubem Duby
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Vojt, Gabriele
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Cassell, Jackie A.
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Estcourt, Claudia S., Howarth, Alison R., Copas, Andrew, Low, Nicola, Mapp, Fiona, Woode Owusu, Melvina, Flowers, Paul, Roberts, Tracy, Mercer, Catherine H., Wayal, Sonali, Symonds, Merle, Nandwani, Rak, Saunders, John, Johnson, Anne M., Pothoulaki, Maria, Althaus, Christian, Pickering, Karen, McKinnon, Tamsin, Brice, Susannah, Comer, Alex, Tostevin, Anna, Ogwulu, Chidubem Duby, Vojt, Gabriele and Cassell, Jackie A. (2020) Accelerated partner therapy (APT) partner notification for people with Chlamydia trachomatis: Protocol for the Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity (LUSTRUM) APT cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial. BMJ Open, 10 (3), [e034806]. (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2019-034806).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Introduction Partner notification (PN) is a process aiming to identify, test and treat the sex partners of people (index patients) with sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Accelerated partner therapy (APT) is a PN method whereby healthcare professionals assess sex partners, by telephone consultation, before giving the index patient antibiotics and STI self-sampling kits to deliver to their sex partner(s). The Limiting Undetected Sexually Transmitted infections to RedUce Morbidity programme aims to determine the effectiveness of APT in heterosexual women and men with chlamydia and determine whether APT could affect Chlamydia trachomatis transmission at population level. Methods and analysis This protocol describes a cross-over cluster randomised controlled trial of APT, offered as an additional PN method, compared with standard PN. The trial is accompanied by an economic evaluation, transmission dynamic modelling and a qualitative process evaluation involving patients, partners and healthcare professionals. Clusters are 17 sexual health clinics in areas of England and Scotland with contrasting patient demographics. We will recruit 5440 heterosexual women and men with chlamydia, aged ≥16 years. The primary outcome is the proportion of index patients testing positive for C. trachomatis 12-16 weeks after the PN consultation. Secondary outcomes include: proportion of sex partners treated; cost effectiveness; model-predicted chlamydia prevalence; experiences of APT. The primary outcome analysis will be by intention-to-treat, fitting random effects logistic regression models that account for clustering of index patients within clinics and trial periods. The transmission dynamic model will be used to predict change in chlamydia prevalence following APT. The economic evaluation will use mathematical modelling outputs, taking a health service perspective. Qualitative data will be analysed using interpretative phenomenological analysis and framework analysis. Ethics and dissemination This protocol received ethical approval from London-Chelsea Research Ethics Committee (18/LO/0773). Findings will be published with open access licences. Trial registration number ISRCTN15996256.

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Published date: 27 March 2020
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2020. Re-use permitted under CC BY. Published by BMJ.
Keywords: accelerated partner therapy, chlamydia, partner notification, RCT, STIs, transmission

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 501065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/501065
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: c17508b6-edc5-4873-ab8c-45616e91773e
ORCID for Gabriele Vojt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9135-0684

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Date deposited: 21 May 2025 17:04
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Claudia S. Estcourt
Author: Alison R. Howarth
Author: Andrew Copas
Author: Nicola Low
Author: Fiona Mapp
Author: Melvina Woode Owusu
Author: Paul Flowers
Author: Tracy Roberts
Author: Catherine H. Mercer
Author: Sonali Wayal
Author: Merle Symonds
Author: Rak Nandwani
Author: John Saunders
Author: Anne M. Johnson
Author: Maria Pothoulaki
Author: Christian Althaus
Author: Karen Pickering
Author: Tamsin McKinnon
Author: Susannah Brice
Author: Alex Comer
Author: Anna Tostevin
Author: Chidubem Duby Ogwulu
Author: Gabriele Vojt ORCID iD
Author: Jackie A. Cassell

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