Feb 7, 9:46 AM EST
Rare Chlamydia Strain Infecting
Gay Men
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
AP Medical Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A particularly
bad strain of chlamydia not usually seen in this country
appears to be slowly spreading among gay and bisexual men,
an infection that can increase their chances of getting
or spreading the AIDS virus.
Called LGV chlamydia, this
sexually transmitted disease has caused a worrisome outbreak
in Europe, where some countries have confirmed dozens of
cases. Diagnoses confirmed by U.S. health officials still
are low, just 27 since they warned a year ago that the strain
was headed here.
But specialists say that's
undoubtedly a fraction of the infections, because this illness
is incredibly hard to diagnose: Few U.S. clinics and laboratories
can test for it. Painful symptoms can be mistaken for other
illnesses, such as irritable bowel syndrome.
And because LGV chlamydia
doesn't always cause noticeable symptoms - right away, at
least - an unknown number of people may silently harbor
and spread it, along with an increased risk of HIV transmission.
"My feeling is that what we're seeing now is still
the tip of the iceberg," says Dr. Philippe Chiliade
of the Whitman-Walker Clinic in Washington, D.C., which
diagnosed its first few cases of LGV last month and is beginning
to push for asymptomatic men to be screened.
The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention already was counting an 8 percent increase
in HIV among gay and bisexual men between 2003 and 2004,
before LGV's arrival was recognized.
"We are really concerned
about this," says Dr. Catherine McLean of CDC's HIV
and STD prevention program.
Increasing the ability to
test for LGV is "what's really critically important,"
she adds. "The prevalence of the disease is probably
quite a bit higher than the reported cases indicate, either
here or in Europe, but we don't yet know that."
Three weeks of the antibiotic doxycycline effectively treats
LGV. But patients have to know they're at risk, and then
find a test.
Chlamydia, caused by bacteria,
is among the most common sexually transmitted diseases.
As many as 3 million Americans a year may become infected
with common strains, best known for causing infertility
in women if left untreated.
This more virulent strain
is called "lymphogranuloma venereum," or LGV.
It's not a new form, but one rarely seen outside of Africa
or Southeast Asia. So STD specialists were stunned in late
2004, when the Netherlands announced an outbreak that reached
over 100 cases; last summer, one clinic there reported seeing
one to two new patients a week. Cases also have surfaced
in much of Western Europe and Britain. As with the U.S.
cases, many also have HIV.
Symptoms differ from regular
chlamydia: swollen lymph nodes in the groin; genital or
rectal ulcers; and painful bowel movements and other gastrointestinal
symptoms that may mimic inflammatory bowel disease. Such
symptoms leave patients particularly susceptible to HIV
infection if they also encounter that virus.
LGV can infect both sexes,
although new cases diagnosed so far are among men having
sex with men.
Screening requires nucleic
acid testing, a complex type of genetic testing not yet
commercially available for rectal use. The CDC then uses
even more sophisticated testing to confirm the diagnosis.
Because testing is difficult,
no one knows how prevalent LGV truly is. In a surprise finding
last fall, Dutch scientists tested some tissue samples stored
in San Francisco since the 1980s, and found evidence that
today's LGV strain had gone unrecognized at the time. So
has it been simmering here all along, or is it on the rise?
Regardless of how that question
turns out, LGV is one more sexually transmitted illness
that plays a role in HIV.
Thus, the CDC is encouraging
doctors who spot LGV symptoms to contact their local health
department for help in finding a nearby testing lab, or
in shipping samples to CDC for testing there.
"But I don't want people
to think you have to have severe pain," cautions Chiliade,
whose clinic recently became authorized to offer the NAT
rectal screening - and who recommends it for gay men who
have had unprotected sex even if they feel no symptoms.
EDITOR'S NOTE - Lauran Neergaard
covers health and medical issues for The Associated Press
in Washington.
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