Congenital and Maternal Point of Care Rapid Testing for Syphilis Study, Uganda

NCT ID: NCT07173764

Last Updated: 2025-09-15

Study Results

Results pending

The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.

Basic Information

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Recruitment Status

NOT_YET_RECRUITING

Total Enrollment

24 participants

Study Classification

OBSERVATIONAL

Study Start Date

2025-09-30

Study Completion Date

2025-12-31

Brief Summary

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Syphilis is an infection which affects about 1 in 25 pregnant women in Uganda. If the infection is not diagnosed and treated this can be a risk to the mother and unborn baby's health. This study aims to see whether a new test for syphilis infection in mothers and babies which can give a result in 10 minutes is as good as the standard tests that are done in the laboratory and take hours or days to provide results.

Detailed Description

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Maternal syphilis is a major cause of poor birth outcomes including congenital syphilis (CS), which may cause miscarriage, stillbirth, or birth defects. In 2016, the global maternal syphilis prevalence was an estimated 0.69% resulting in a global CS rate of 473 per 100,000 live births and 661,000 total CS cases, including 355,000 adverse birth outcomes and 306,000 non-clinical CS cases (infants without clinical signs born to untreated mothers). The prevalence of syphilis and CS in Uganda is high. In a study of 570 antenatal women with HIV in Kampala, 5.1% had syphilis. Other Ugandan studies have demonstrated \>3% prevalence of antenatal syphilis and CS prevalence of 3.8% among newborns.

Testing for syphilis in pregnancy accompanied by effective treatment with benzyl penicillin G (benzathine penicillin) can significantly reduce the risk of CS. This should ideally occur as early in pregnancy as possible, with each additional week of delay in diagnosis and treatment increasing the risk of CS. Syphilis testing in Uganda, as in many other low- and middle-income countries, primarily relies on rapid diagnostic tests that detect IgG antibodies against Treponema pallidum, the bacterium responsible for syphilis. These treponemal tests (TT) are highly sensitive and therefore valuable for initial diagnosis but cannot differentiate between untreated and previously treated syphilis due to their lifelong positive result.

To confirm infection, a lipoidal, non-treponemal test (NTT) like the rapid plasma reagin (RPR) test is also required. NTTs are relatively inexpensive but require a reliable electricity supply, reagents, laboratory infrastructure and trained laboratory personnel. The performance of tests like the RPR may be suboptimal with wide inter-laboratory variation, especially in low-income settings with high humidity levels. This prevents diagnosis and treatment from occurring during the same antenatal visit, leading to treatment delays or treatment being missed entirely. Following treatment, NTT antibody titres are ideally followed up to 12 or 24 months (depending on syphilis stage and HIV status), which is also complicated by the above issues.

In babies born to mothers with syphilis, serological diagnosis of CS is made by demonstrating a ≥4- fold higher NTT titre in infant compared to maternal blood (e.g., maternal NTT titre 1:2, infant NTT titre 1:8). The higher titre in the infant suggests that NTT antibodies were being made in the fetus representing infant infection. TTs are not useful in the serological diagnosis of CS because they likely represent transplacental transfer of maternal treponemal IgG. The infrastructure required and delays to provision of results for traditional RPR testing creates similar challenges in diagnosing and treating infants born at risk of CS or with clinical features consistent with CS as it does in pregnant persons.

Lateral flow assays are simple, quick, and potentially low-cost tests that can be conducted at the point- of-care, enabling clinicians to make timely diagnoses and allowing testing and treatment to be provided during the same encounter. This has clear benefits for patients in reducing number of clinic visits required, and in the context of the Ugandan healthcare system where only 37% of women receive antenatal care in the first trimester and 68% have 4 or more antenatal visits, reducing any delays to treatment and risk of loss to follow up are essential.

The Chembio DPP Syphilis TnT (Chembio Diagnostics, Medford, NY, USA) is a point of care test (POCT) that gives both treponemal IgG and IgM and non-treponemal IgG and IgM results. It is the second generation of a device with improvements in sensitivity of non-treponemal tests compared to the first generation Syphilis Screen \& Confirm test. The results provided by the Chembio DPP TnT and the CS test (under development) could allow healthcare providers to accurately diagnose pregnant women and newborns with syphilis and commence treatment during the same clinical encounter, reducing delayed and missed treatment. It has the potential to allow for differentiation between current and past infection and is capable of quantification of treponemal and non-treponemal IgM and IgG (TnT test), and treponemal and non-treponemal IgA and IgM (CS test) which may allow improvements in the diagnosis of active infection and confirmation of treatment success.

This study will validate Chembio DPP TnT against conventional treponemal and non-treponemal testing pathways in a Ugandan population, using blood samples from pregnant women, umbilical cords, and newborns taken around the time of delivery. Validation of the Chembio DPP TnT could facilitate its implementation in streamlined diagnosis and treatment monitoring pathways that might reduce delays to treatment, improve treatment rates and confirmation of treatment success. This pilot study will demonstrate the feasibility of performing such validation in this setting and will therefore lay the groundwork for further larger studies to contribute further to this validation work.

Conditions

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Syphilis Syphilis, Congenital

Study Design

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Observational Model Type

COHORT

Study Time Perspective

PROSPECTIVE

Eligibility Criteria

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Inclusion Criteria

* Mothers delivering at Kawempe National Referral Hospital with a positive syphilis rapid diagnostic test during their current pregnancy.

Exclusion Criteria

* Mothers who are unable to give written informed consent.
* Mothers with evidence of neurological symptoms compatible with neurological syphilis.
* Mothers who are aged less than 14 years. Emancipated and mature minors are allowed to consent for research per Ugandan law.11
* Mothers, who in the view of the study team, are unable to adhere to required study procedures
Minimum Eligible Age

14 Years

Eligible Sex

ALL

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Sponsors

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Johns Hopkins University

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

MU-JHU CARE

OTHER

Sponsor Role collaborator

St George's, University of London

OTHER

Sponsor Role lead

Responsible Party

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Responsibility Role SPONSOR

Locations

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Kawempe National Referral Hospital

Kampala, , Uganda

Site Status

Countries

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Uganda

Facility Contacts

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Musa Sekikubo

Role: primary

(+256) 200 404 100

Other Identifiers

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2025.0124

Identifier Type: -

Identifier Source: org_study_id

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