The goal of this clinical trial is to learn if doxycycline taken as 200mg daily for 14 days is effective to treat early stage syphilis. This is different from how doxycycline is typically used for syphilis because the full doxycycline dose will be taken at the same time of day, rather than split up into a twice daily regimen. Lab data support that taking the medication as a single daily dose should be effective as treatment, but it has not been studied clinically. The main question this study aims to answer is: Is doxycycline taken as a single daily dose of 200mg for 14 days an effective treatment for early syphilis based on a combined outcome of clinical improvement and blood test improvement? Participants will: 1. Take doxycycline 200mg daily for 14 days 2. Submit oral and rectal swabs that test for syphilis bacteria every other day for 2 weeks, returned by mail 3. Complete 2 brief online surveys over the first 2 weeks 4. Return to the clinic for an interview and blood draw every 3 months for a maximum of 3 study visits, including the first visit The investigators will compare the percentage of participants in the study who have response to treatment by 6 months to that of persons who have received standard (CDC-recommended) regimens. To do this, the investigators will calculate response percentage estimates following a shot of long-acting penicillin or 14 days of doxycycline 100mg twice daily from 60-person samples from the sexual health program's records.
This is an open-label prospective cohort of 15 participants diagnosed with early syphilis treated with doxycycline 200mg daily for 14 days. The outcome of interest is clinical improvement and fourfold decline in RPR by 6 months. This study will include rectal and oropharyngeal sampling with syphilis transcription-mediated amplification (TMA), every other day for the 14-day course, returned by mail. The investigators will obtain 6-month point estimates for cure following single-dose intramuscular benzathine penicillin G or 14 days of doxycycline 100mg twice daily in retrospective cohorts of 60 persons. The investigators will use binomial exact calculation with an alpha of 0.05, two-tailed, to create a point estimates of percent cure. The investigators will report TMA positivity descriptively.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
15
Doxycycline will be taken as a single dose of 200mg daily, rather than the current CDC-recommended 100mg twice daily regimen for early syphilis. The duration will still be 14 days of therapy.
Public Health Sexual Health Clinic
Seattle, Washington, United States
RECRUITINGComposite clinical and serological response
Clinical response and serological response will be aggregated to arrive at one reported value, a binary outcome of "yes" (1) or "no" (0). Clinical response equates to resolution of clinical symptoms of syphilis the participants presented with, such as rash or chancre, without the development of new symptoms of syphilis. Resolution will be marked as "yes" or "no". Serological response equates to a fourfold decrease in RPR compared to the presenting RPR titer by 6 months. Resolution will be marked as "yes" or "no". Thus, to generate the composite response outcome, participants with outcomes of "yes" for both clinical response and serological response will qualify as a binary outcome of "yes" (1) . Participants who do not have outcomes of "yes" for both clinical response and serological response will qualify as a binary outcome of "no" (0).
Time frame: 6 months
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