Congenital syphilis medical therapy: Difference between revisions

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{{CMG}}
__NOTOC__
{{CMG}} {{AE}} {{KD}} {{AKI}}
{{Congenital syphilis}}
{{Congenital syphilis}}
==Overview==
==Overview==
Mothers with syphilis infection should be treated with [[penicillin]] and advised regular follow up. The treatment of the neonate depends on the clinical presentation and managment varies with the severity of the infection.


==Treatment==
==Medical Therapy==
If a pregnant mother is identified as being infected with syphilis, treatment can effectively prevent congenital syphilis from developing in the unborn child, especially if she is treated before the sixteenth week of [[pregnancy]]. The child is at greatest risk of contracting syphilis when the mother is in the early stages of [[infection]], but the disease can be passed at any point during pregnancy, even during delivery (should the child have not contracted it already). However, a woman in the secondary stage of syphilis decreases her child's risk of developing congenital syphilis by 98% if she receives treatment before the last month of pregnancy<ref>http://www.webmd.com/hw/health_guide_atoz/hw195492.asp?navbar=hw195073</ref>. An afflicted child can be treated using antibiotics much like an adult, however any developmental symptoms are likely to be permanent.
===Management during Antenatal Period===
 
{| border="1"
===Scenario 1.===
|-
Infants with proven or highly probable disease and an abnormal [[physical examination]] that is consistent with congenital syphilis,
!
a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer that is fourfold higher than the mother’s titer, or
!'''CDC Recommendations for management of pregnant woman with Syphilis infection'''
a positive darkfield or fluorescent antibody test of body fluid(s).
|-
====Recommended Evaluation====
!'''Approach during the Prenatal Period'''
*[[CSF analysis]] for [[VDRL]], cell count, and protein
|
*[[Complete blood count]] ([[CBC]]) and differential and [[platelet count]]
*All women should be screened [[Syphilis laboratory tests#Serology|serologically]] for [[syphilis]] early in [[pregnancy]].<ref name=syphilis>https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Document/RecommendationStatementFinal/syphilis-infection-in-pregnancy-screening Accessed on september 27,2016</ref><ref name=cdc2015>http://www.cdc.gov/std/tg2015/references.htm#424 Accessed on September 27, 2016</ref>
*Other tests as clinically indicated (e.g., long-bone radiographs, [[chest radiograph]], [[liver function test]]s, cranial [[ultrasound]], [[ophthalmologic]] examination, and [[auditory brainstem response]])
*Most states mandate screening at the first prenatal visit for all women;<ref name="pmid11384701">Hollier LM, Harstad TW, Sanchez PJ, Twickler DM, Wendel GD (2001) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=11384701 Fetal syphilis: clinical and laboratory characteristics.] ''Obstet Gynecol'' 97 (6):947-53. PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/11384701 11384701]</ref>antepartum screening by [[Syphilis laboratory findings#Nontreponemal test|nontreponemal antibody testing]] is typical, but in some settings, [[Syphilis laboratory findings#Treponemal test|treponemal antibody testing]] is being used.
====Recommended Regimens====
*[[Pregnant women]] with reactive [[treponemal]] screening tests should have confirmatory testing with [[nontreponemal]] tests with titers to monitor treatment response.
*Aqueous crystalline penicillin G 100,000–150,000 units/kg/day, administered as 50,000 units/kg/dose IV every 12 hours during the first 7 days of life and every 8 hours thereafter for a total of 10 days
*In populations in which use of [[prenatal care]] is not optimal, [[Rapid plasma reagent|RPR test]] screening and treatment (if the RPR test is reactive) should be performed at the time that pregnancy is confirmed.
Or
*For communities and populations in which the [[prevalence]] of [[syphilis]] is high and for patients at high risk, [[serologic testing]] should be performed twice during the [[third trimester]] (ideally at 28-32 weeks' gestation) and at delivery.
*Procaine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg/dose IM in a single daily dose for 10 days
*Any woman who delivers a [[stillborn]] after 20 weeks of [[gestation]] should be tested for [[syphilis]].
If >1 day of therapy is missed, the entire course should be restarted. Data are insufficient regarding the use of other antimicrobial agents (e.g., [[ampicillin]]). When possible, a full 10-day course of penicillin is preferred, even if ampicillin was initially provided for possible [[sepsis]]. The use of agents other than penicillin requires close serologic follow-up to assess adequacy of therapy. In all other situations, the maternal history of infection with [[T. pallidum]] and treatment for syphilis must be considered when evaluating and treating the [[infant]].
*No [[infant]] should leave the hospital without the maternal serologic status having been determined at least once during [[pregnancy]].
* The absence of a fourfold or greater titer for an infant does not exclude congenital syphilis.
*Quantitative maternal [[nontreponemal titer]], especially if >1:8, might be a marker of early infection and [[bacteremia]]. However, risk for fetal infection is still significant in [[pregnant]] women with late [[latent syphilis]] and low titers.
 
*[[Seropositive]] [[pregnant]] women should be considered infected unless an adequate treatment history is documented clearly in the medical records and sequential [[serologic]] [[antibody]] titers have declined.
* CSF test results obtained during the neonatal period can be difficult to interpret; normal values differ by gestational age and are higher in [[preterm]] infants. Values as high as 25 white blood cells ([[WBC]]s)/mm3 and/or protein of 150 mg/dL might occur among normal neonates; some specialists, however, recommend that lower values (i.e., 5 WBCs/mm3 and protein of 40 mg/dL) be considered the upper limits of normal. Other causes of elevated values should be considered when an infant is being evaluated for congenital syphilis.
*Serofast low [[antibody]] [[titers]] might not require treatment; however, persistent higher titer antibody tests might indicate reinfection, and treatment might be required.
|-
!'''Recommended Regimen for Treatment'''
|
*Pregnant women should be treated with the [[penicillin]] regimen appropriate for their stage of infection.<ref name="urlSexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010">{{cite web|url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5912a1.htm |title=Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010 |format= |work= |accessdate=2012-12-19}}</ref>
* [[Penicillin]] is effective for preventing maternal transmission to the [[fetus]] and for treating fetal infection.<ref name="pmid9916946">Alexander JM, Sheffield JS, Sanchez PJ, Mayfield J, Wendel GD (1999) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=9916946 Efficacy of treatment for syphilis in pregnancy.] ''Obstet Gynecol'' 93 (1):5-8. PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/9916946 9916946]</ref>Evidence is insufficient to determine optimal, recommended penicillin regimens.<ref name="pmid11686978">Walker GJ (2001) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=11686978 Antibiotics for syphilis diagnosed during pregnancy.] ''Cochrane Database Syst Rev''  (3):CD001143. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD001143 DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD001143] PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/11686978 11686978]</ref>
|-
!'''Additional Considerations'''
|
*Some evidence suggests that additional therapy can be beneficial for pregnant women in some settings (e.g., a second dose of [[Penicillin#Benzylpenicillin (penicillin G)|benzathine penicillin]] 2.4 million units IM administered 1 week after the initial dose for women who have [[Syphilis pathophysiology#Primary syphilis|primary]], [[Syphilis pathophysiology#Secondary syphilis|secondary]], or [[Syphilis pathophysiology#Latent syphilis|early latent syphilis]]). <ref name="pmid12353207">Wendel GD, Sheffield JS, Hollier LM, Hill JB, Ramsey PS, Sánchez PJ (2002) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=12353207 Treatment of syphilis in pregnancy and prevention of congenital syphilis.] ''Clin Infect Dis'' 35 (Suppl 2):S200-9. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1086/342108 DOI:10.1086/342108] PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/12353207 12353207]</ref>
*When syphilis is diagnosed during the second half of pregnancy, management should include a sonographic fetal evaluation for [[congenital syphilis]], but this evaluation should not delay therapy.
*Sonographic signs of fetal or placental syphilis (i.e., [[hepatomegaly]], [[ascites]], [[hydrops]], [[anemia|fetal anemia]], or a thickened placenta) indicate a greater risk for fetal treatment failure;<ref name="pmid11384701">Hollier LM, Harstad TW, Sanchez PJ, Twickler DM, Wendel GD (2001) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=11384701 Fetal syphilis: clinical and laboratory characteristics.] ''Obstet Gynecol'' 97 (6):947-53. PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/11384701 11384701]</ref> such cases should be managed in consultation with obstetric specialists. Evidence is insufficient to recommend specific regimens for these situations.
*Women treated for syphilis during the second half of pregnancy are at risk for [[premature labor]] and/or [[fetal distress]] if the treatment precipitates the [[Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction]].<ref name="pmid2304710">Klein VR, Cox SM, Mitchell MD, Wendel GD (1990) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=2304710 The Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction complicating syphilotherapy in pregnancy.] ''Obstet Gynecol'' 75 (3 Pt 1):375-80. PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/2304710 2304710]</ref> These women should be advised to seek obstetric attention after treatment if they notice any fever, contractions, or decrease in fetal movements.
*[[Stillbirth]] is a rare complication of treatment, but concern for this complication should not delay necessary treatment.
*Pregnant women taking treatment for late latent syphilis should not miss any dose, else she must repeat the whole course of therapy.<ref name="pmid8355931">{{cite journal| author=Nathan L, Bawdon RE, Sidawi JE, Stettler RW, McIntire DM, Wendel GD| title=Penicillin levels following the administration of benzathine penicillin G in pregnancy. | journal=Obstet Gynecol | year= 1993 | volume= 82 | issue= 3 | pages= 338-42 | pmid=8355931 | doi= | pmc= | url=https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&tool=sumsearch.org/cite&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=8355931  }} </ref>
*All patients who have syphilis should be offered testing for HIV infection.
|-
!'''In patients with Penicillin Allergy'''
|
*For treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, no proven alternatives to [[penicillin]] exist.  
*Pregnant women who have a history of [[Syphilis medical therapy#Pencillin allergy|penicillin allergy]] should be desensitized and treated with [[penicillin]].  
*Oral step-wise penicillin dose challenge or [[Syphilis medical therapy#Pencillin allergy: Penicillin skin test|skin testing]] may be helpful in identifying women at risk for acute allergic reactions.
*[[Tetracycline]] and [[doxycycline]] usually are not used during pregnancy. [[Erythromycin]] and [[azithromycin]] should not be used, because neither reliably cures maternal infection or treats an infected fetus.<ref name="pmid11686978">Walker GJ (2001) [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/eutils/elink.fcgi?dbfrom=pubmed&retmode=ref&cmd=prlinks&id=11686978 Antibiotics for syphilis diagnosed during pregnancy.] ''Cochrane Database Syst Rev''  (3):CD001143. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/14651858.CD001143 DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD001143] PMID: [http://pubmed.gov/11686978 11686978]</ref>
*Data are insufficient to recommend [[ceftriaxone]] for treatment of maternal infection and prevention of [[congenital syphilis]].
|-
!'''Pregnant Woman with HIV Infection'''
|
*Placental inflammation from [[congenital]] infection might increase the risk for [[perinatal]] transmission of [[HIV]].  
*All [[HIV]]-infected women should be evaluated for [[syphilis]] and receive treatment as recommended.
*Data are insufficient to recommend a specific regimen for HIV-infected pregnant women.
|-
!'''Follow Up'''
|
*Coordinated prenatal care and treatment are vital.
*[[Serologic]] titers should be repeated at 28-32 weeks' gestation and at [[delivery]] as recommended for the disease stage. Providers should ensure that the clinical and antibody responses are appropriate for the patient's stage of disease, although most women will deliver before their serologic response to treatment can be assessed definitively.  
*Inadequate maternal treatment is likely if delivery occurs within 30 days of therapy, if clinical signs of infection are present at delivery, or if the maternal [[antibody]] titer at delivery is fourfold higher than the pretreatment titer.  
*[[Serologic]] titers can be checked monthly in women at high risk for reinfection or in geographic areas in which the prevalence of [[syphilis]] is high.<ref name="urlSexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010">{{cite web|url=http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/rr5912a1.htm |title=Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010 |format= |work= |accessdate=2012-12-19}}</ref>
|}


===Scenario 2===
===Management of a Neonate or an Infant with Congenital Syphilis===
Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitive nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and the
The diagnosis of [[congenital syphilis]] can be difficult, as maternal [[nontreponemal]] and [[treponemal]] [[IgG]] [[antibodies]] can be transferred through the [[placenta]] to the [[fetus]], complicating the interpretation of reactive [[serologic]] tests for [[syphilis]] in [[neonates]]. Therefore, treatment decisions frequently must be made on the basis of:
mother was not treated, inadequately treated, or has no documentation of having received treatment;
*Identification of [[syphilis]] in the mother
mother was treated with erythromycin or other nonpenicillin regimen;** or
*Adequacy of maternal treatment
mother received treatment <4 weeks before delivery.
*Presence of clinical, laboratory, or [[radiographic]] evidence of [[syphilis]] in the [[neonate]]
====Recommended Evaluation====
*Comparison of maternal (at delivery) and [[neonatal]] [[nontreponemal]] [[serologic]] [[titers]] using the same test, preferably conducted by the same laboratory.
*CSF analysis for VDRL, cell count, and protein
*CBC and differential and platelet count
*Long-bone radiographs
*A complete evaluation is not necessary if 10 days of parenteral therapy is administered. However, such evaluations might be useful; a lumbar puncture might document CSF abnormalities that would prompt close follow-up. Other tests (e.g., CBC, platelet count, and bone radiographs) may be performed to further support a diagnosis of congenital syphilis. If a single dose of benzathine penicillin G is used, then the infant must be fully evaluated (i.e., through CSF examination, long-bone radiographs, and CBC with platelets), the full evaluation must be normal, and follow-up must be certain. If any part of the infant’s evaluation is abnormal or not performed or if the CSF analysis is rendered uninterpretable because of contamination with blood, then a 10-day course of penicillin is required.††


====Recommended Regimens====
====Evaluation and Approach====
*All [[neonates]] born to mothers who have reactive [[nontreponemal]] and [[treponemal]] test results should be evaluated with a quantitative [[nontreponemal]] [[serologic]] test ([[RPR]] or [[VDRL]]) performed on the [[neonate's]] [[serum]], because [[umbilical cord]] blood can become contaminated with maternal blood and yield a [[false-positive result]], and Wharton's jelly within the [[umbilical cord]] can yield a false-negative result.
*Conducting a treponemal test (i.e., TP-PA, FTA-ABS, EIA, or CIA) on neonatal serum is not recommended because it is difficult to interpret.
*Any [[neonate]] at risk for [[congenital syphilis]] should receive a full evaluation and testing for [[HIV]] infection.
*The following scenarios describe the [[congenital syphilis]] evaluation and treatment of [[neonates]] born to women who have reactive [[serologic]] tests for [[syphilis]] during [[pregnancy]]. Maternal history of infection with [[T. pallidum]] and treatment for [[syphilis]] must be considered when evaluating and treating the neonate for [[congenital syphilis]] in most scenarios, except when [[congenital syphilis]] is proven or highly probable.
{| border="1"
|-
!
!'''[[CDC]] Recommendations for management of [[neonates]] with [[congenital Syphilis]]'''
|-
!'''Clinical senario 1'''
|
*[[Infants]] with proven or highly probable disease and with any one of the following :
**An abnormal physical examination that is consistent with [[congenital syphilis]] '''or'''
**A serum quantitative [[non treponemal]] [[serologic]] titer that is fourfold higher than the mother's titer '''or'''
**A positive [[darkfield test]] of body fluid(s).
'''Recommended Evaluation'''
*[[CSF]] analysis for [[VDRL]], cell count, and protein
*[[Complete blood count]] (CBC) and differential and platelet count
*Other tests as clinically indicated (e.g., long-bone radiographs, chest radiograph, liver-function tests, neuroimaging, ophthalmologic examination, and auditory brain stem response)
'''Preferred regimen 1:''' [[Aqueous crystalline penicillin G]] 100,000-150,000 U/kg/day, administered as 50,000 U/kg/dose IV q12h during the first 7 days of life and q8h thereafter for a total of 10 days<br>
'''Preferred regimen 2:''' [[Procaine penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg/dose IM q24h for 10 days<br>
<small>Note: If more than 1 day of therapy is missed, the entire course should be restarted. Data are insufficient regarding the use of other antimicrobial agents (e.g., [[ampicillin]]). When possible, a full 10-day course of [[penicillin]] is preferred, even if ampicillin was initially provided for possible sepsis. The use of agents other than penicillin requires close serologic follow-up to assess adequacy of therapy. In all other situations, the maternal history of infection with ''T. pallidum'' and treatment for syphilis must be considered when evaluating and treating the infant <small>
|-
!'''Clinical senario 2'''
|
*[[Infants]] who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer '''and''' with one of the following:
**Mother was not treated or inadequately treated, or has no documentation of having received treatment '''or'''
**Mother was treated with [[erythromycin]] or another non-penicillin regimen '''or'''
**Mother received treatment less than 4 weeks before [[delivery]].
'''Recommended Evaluation'''
*[[CSF]] analysis for [[VDRL]], cell count, and protein
*CBC, differential, and platelet count
*Long-bone [[radiographs]]
'''Preferred regimen 1:''' [[Aqueous crystalline penicillin G]] 100,000-150,000 U/kg/day, administered as 50,000 U/kg/dose IV q12h during the first 7 days of life and q8h thereafter for a total of 10 days<br>
'''Preferred regimen 2:''' [[Procaine penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg/dose IM q24h for 10 days<br>
'''Preferred regimen 3:''' [[Benzathine penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg/dose IM single dose<br>
<small>Note: If the mother has untreated early syphilis at delivery, 10 days of parenteral therapy can be considered<br>
Before using the single-dose benzathine penicillin G regimen, the complete evaluation (i.e., CSF examination, long-bone radiographs, and CBC with platelets) must be normal, and follow-up must be certain. If any part of the infant's evaluation is abnormal or not performed, if the CSF analysis is uninterpretable because of contamination with blood, or if follow-up is uncertain, a 10-day course of penicillin G is required. If the neonate's nontreponemal test is nonreactive and the provider determines that the mother's risk of untreated syphilis is low, treatment of the neonate with a single IM dose of benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg for possible incubating syphilis can be considered without an evaluation.<br>
Neonates born to mothers with untreated early syphilis at the time of delivery are at increased risk for congenital syphilis, and the 10-day course of penicillin G may be considered even if the complete evaluation is normal and follow-up is certain.<small>
|-
!'''Clinical senario 3'''
|
*Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer '''and'''
*Mother was treated during [[pregnancy]], treatment was appropriate for the stage of infection, and treatment was administered >4 weeks before delivery '''and'''
*Mother has no evidence of reinfection or relapse.
'''Recommended Evaluation''''
*No evaluation recommended
'''Preferred regimen:''' [[Benzathine penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg/dose IM single dose
|-
!'''Clinical senario 4'''
|
*Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer '''and'''
*Mother's treatment was adequate before pregnancy '''and'''
*Mother's nontreponemal serologic titer remained low and stable before and during pregnancy and at delivery ([[VDRL]] <1:2; [[RPR]] <1:4)
'''Recommended evaluation'''
*No evaluation recommended
*No treatment is required
*[[Benzathine penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg IM single dose might be considered, particularly if follow-up is uncertain
|-
!'''Follow up'''
|
*All [[neonates]] with reactive [[nontreponemal]] tests should receive careful follow-up examinations and [[serologic]] testing (i.e., a nontreponemal test) every 2–3 months until the test becomes nonreactive.
*In the [[neonate]] who was not treated because [[congenital syphilis]] was considered less likely or unlikely, [[nontreponemal]] [[antibody]] [[titers]] should decline by age 3 months and be nonreactive by age 6 months, indicating that the reactive test result was caused by passive transfer of maternal [[IgG]] [[antibody]].
*At 6 months, if the [[nontreponemal]] test is nonreactive, no further evaluation or treatment is needed; if the nontreponemal test is still reactive, the infant is likely to be infected and should be treated.
*Treated [[neonates]] that exhibit persistent [[nontreponemal]] test [[titers]] by 6–12 months should be re-evaluated through [[CSF]] examination and managed in consultation with an expert. Retreatment with a 10-day course of a penicillin G regimen may be indicated.
*[[Neonates]] with a negative nontreponemal test at birth and whose mothers were seroreactive at delivery should be retested at 3 months to rule out serologically negative incubating [[congenital syphilis]] at the time of [[birth]].
*[[Neonates]] whose initial [[CSF]] evaluations are abnormal should undergo a repeat [[lumbar puncture]] approximately every 6 months until the results are normal
<small>Note: Treponemal tests should not be used to evaluate treatment response because the results are qualitative and passive transfer of maternal [[IgG]] treponemal antibody might persist for at least 15 months<br>
A reactive [[CSF]] Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test or abnormal CSF indices that persist and cannot be attributed to other ongoing illness requires retreatment for possible neurosyphilis and should be managed in consultation with an expert.<small>
|-
!'''Penicillin Allergy'''
|
*[[Infants]] and [[children]] who require treatment for [[congenital syphilis]] but who have a history of penicillin allergy or develop an allergic reaction presumed secondary to penicillin should be desensitized and then treated with [[penicillin]].
* Data are insufficient regarding the use of other antimicrobial agents (e.g., [[ceftriaxone]]) for [[congenital syphilis]] in [[infants]] and [[children]].
|}


*Aqueous crystalline penicillin G 100,000–150,000 units/kg/day, administered as 50,000 units/kg/dose IV every 12 hours during the first 7 days of life and every 8 hours thereafter for a total of 10 days
===Management of infants and children with congenital syphilis===
OR
{| border="1"
*Procaine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg/dose IM in a single daily dose for 10 days
|-
OR
!
*Benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg/dose IM in a single dose
!'''[[CDC]] Recommendations for management of [[Infants]] and [[Children]] with [[Congenital Syphilis]]'''
Some specialists prefer the 10 days of parenteral therapy if the mother has untreated early syphilis at delivery.
|-
** A woman treated with a regimen other than those recommended in these guidelines for treatment should be considered untreated.
!'''[[Congenital Syphilis]] in [[infants]] and [[children]]'''
**If the infant’s nontreponemal test is nonreactive and the likelihood of the infant being infected is low, certain specialists recommend no evaluation but treatment of the infant with a single IM dose of benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg for possible incubating syphilis, after which the infant should receive close serologic follow-up.
|
===Scenario 3===
*[[Infants]] and [[children]] aged ≥1 month who are identified as having reactive [[serologic]] tests for [[syphilis]] should be examined thoroughly and have [[maternal]] [[serology]] and records reviewed to assess whether they have [[congenital]] or acquired [[syphilis]].
Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and the
*Any [[infant]] or [[child]] at risk for [[congenital syphilis]] should receive a full evaluation and testing for [[HIV]] infection
mother was treated during pregnancy, treatment was appropriate for the stage of infection, and treatment was administered >4 weeks before delivery; and
'''Recommended Evaluation'''
mother has no evidence of reinfection or relapse.
*[[CSF]] analysis for [[VDRL]], cell count, and protein
Recommended Evaluation
*CBC, differential, and [[platelet count]]
No evaluation is required.
*Other tests as clinically indicated (e.g., long-bone radiographs, [[chest radiograph]], [[liver function]] tests, [[abdominal ultrasound]], ophthalmologic examination, neuroimaging, and auditory brain-stem response)


====Recommended Regimen====
'''Preferred regimen:''' [[Aqueous crystalline penicillin G]] 50,000 U/kg q4–6h for 10 days<br>
 
*If the [[infant]] or [[child]] has no clinical manifestations of [[congenital syphilis]] and the evaluation (including the [[CSF]] examination) is normal, treatment with up to 3 weekly doses of [[benzathine penicillin G]], 50,000 U/kg IM can be considered. A single dose of [[benzathine penicillin G]] 50,000 units/kg IM up to the adult dose of 2.4 million units in a single dose can be considered after the 10-day course of IV aqueous [[penicillin]] to provide more comparable duration of treatment in those who have no clinical manifestations and normal [[CSF]]. All of the above treatment regimens also would be adequate for children who might have other [[treponemal]] infections.
*Benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg/dose IM in a single dose§§
|-
§§ Some specialists would not treat the infant but would provide close serologic follow-up in those whose mother’s nontreponemal titers decreased fourfold after appropriate therapy for early syphilis or remained stable or low for late syphilis.
!'''Follow Up'''
====Scenario 4====
|
Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and the
*Careful follow-up examinations and [[serologic testing]] (i.e., a nontreponemal test) of [[infants]] and [[children]] treated for [[congenital syphilis]] after the [[neonatal]] period (30 days of age) should be performed every 3 months until the test becomes nonreactive or the titer has decreased fourfold.
mother’s treatment was adequate before pregnancy, and
*If the titers increase at any point for more than 2 weeks or do not decrease fourfold after 12–18 months, the infant or child should be evaluated (e.g., through [[CSF]] examination), treated with a 10-day course of parenteral [[penicillin G]], and managed in consultation with an expert.
mother’s nontreponemal serologic titer remained low and stable before and during pregnancy and at delivery (VDRL <1:2; RPR <1:4).
* [[Treponemal]] tests should not be used to evaluate treatment response, because the results are qualitative and persist after treatment; further, passive transfer of maternal [[IgG]] [[treponemal]] [[antibody]] might persist for at least 15 months after delivery.
====Recommended Evaluation====
*Infants or children whose initial [[CSF]] evaluations are abnormal should undergo a repeat [[lumbar puncture]] approximately every 6 months until the results are normal. After 2 years of follow-up, a reactive [[CSF]] [[VDRL]] test or abnormal [[CSF]] indices that persists and cannot be attributed to other ongoing illness requires retreatment for possible [[neurosyphilis]] and should be managed in consultation with an expert.
No evaluation is required.
|-
 
!'''Penicillin Allergy'''
====Recommended Regimen====
|
 
*[[Infants]] and children who require treatment for [[congenital syphilis]] but who have a history of [[penicillin]] allergy or develop an allergic reaction presumed secondary to [[penicillin]] should be desensitized and treated with [[penicillin]]
No treatment is required; however, some specialists would treat with benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg as a single IM injection, particularly if follow-up is uncertain.
|}
==External Links==
http://www.cdc.gov/std/treatment/2006/congenital-syphilis.htm


==References==
==References==
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Latest revision as of 21:04, 29 July 2020

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1] Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Kalsang Dolma, M.B.B.S.[2] Aravind Kuchkuntla, M.B.B.S[3]

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Overview

Mothers with syphilis infection should be treated with penicillin and advised regular follow up. The treatment of the neonate depends on the clinical presentation and managment varies with the severity of the infection.

Medical Therapy

Management during Antenatal Period

CDC Recommendations for management of pregnant woman with Syphilis infection
Approach during the Prenatal Period
Recommended Regimen for Treatment
  • Pregnant women should be treated with the penicillin regimen appropriate for their stage of infection.[4]
  • Penicillin is effective for preventing maternal transmission to the fetus and for treating fetal infection.[5]Evidence is insufficient to determine optimal, recommended penicillin regimens.[6]
Additional Considerations
  • Some evidence suggests that additional therapy can be beneficial for pregnant women in some settings (e.g., a second dose of benzathine penicillin 2.4 million units IM administered 1 week after the initial dose for women who have primary, secondary, or early latent syphilis). [7]
  • When syphilis is diagnosed during the second half of pregnancy, management should include a sonographic fetal evaluation for congenital syphilis, but this evaluation should not delay therapy.
  • Sonographic signs of fetal or placental syphilis (i.e., hepatomegaly, ascites, hydrops, fetal anemia, or a thickened placenta) indicate a greater risk for fetal treatment failure;[3] such cases should be managed in consultation with obstetric specialists. Evidence is insufficient to recommend specific regimens for these situations.
  • Women treated for syphilis during the second half of pregnancy are at risk for premature labor and/or fetal distress if the treatment precipitates the Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction.[8] These women should be advised to seek obstetric attention after treatment if they notice any fever, contractions, or decrease in fetal movements.
  • Stillbirth is a rare complication of treatment, but concern for this complication should not delay necessary treatment.
  • Pregnant women taking treatment for late latent syphilis should not miss any dose, else she must repeat the whole course of therapy.[9]
  • All patients who have syphilis should be offered testing for HIV infection.
In patients with Penicillin Allergy
Pregnant Woman with HIV Infection
  • Placental inflammation from congenital infection might increase the risk for perinatal transmission of HIV.
  • All HIV-infected women should be evaluated for syphilis and receive treatment as recommended.
  • Data are insufficient to recommend a specific regimen for HIV-infected pregnant women.
Follow Up
  • Coordinated prenatal care and treatment are vital.
  • Serologic titers should be repeated at 28-32 weeks' gestation and at delivery as recommended for the disease stage. Providers should ensure that the clinical and antibody responses are appropriate for the patient's stage of disease, although most women will deliver before their serologic response to treatment can be assessed definitively.
  • Inadequate maternal treatment is likely if delivery occurs within 30 days of therapy, if clinical signs of infection are present at delivery, or if the maternal antibody titer at delivery is fourfold higher than the pretreatment titer.
  • Serologic titers can be checked monthly in women at high risk for reinfection or in geographic areas in which the prevalence of syphilis is high.[4]

Management of a Neonate or an Infant with Congenital Syphilis

The diagnosis of congenital syphilis can be difficult, as maternal nontreponemal and treponemal IgG antibodies can be transferred through the placenta to the fetus, complicating the interpretation of reactive serologic tests for syphilis in neonates. Therefore, treatment decisions frequently must be made on the basis of:

Evaluation and Approach

CDC Recommendations for management of neonates with congenital Syphilis
Clinical senario 1

Recommended Evaluation

  • CSF analysis for VDRL, cell count, and protein
  • Complete blood count (CBC) and differential and platelet count
  • Other tests as clinically indicated (e.g., long-bone radiographs, chest radiograph, liver-function tests, neuroimaging, ophthalmologic examination, and auditory brain stem response)

Preferred regimen 1: Aqueous crystalline penicillin G 100,000-150,000 U/kg/day, administered as 50,000 U/kg/dose IV q12h during the first 7 days of life and q8h thereafter for a total of 10 days
Preferred regimen 2: Procaine penicillin G 50,000 U/kg/dose IM q24h for 10 days
Note: If more than 1 day of therapy is missed, the entire course should be restarted. Data are insufficient regarding the use of other antimicrobial agents (e.g., ampicillin). When possible, a full 10-day course of penicillin is preferred, even if ampicillin was initially provided for possible sepsis. The use of agents other than penicillin requires close serologic follow-up to assess adequacy of therapy. In all other situations, the maternal history of infection with T. pallidum and treatment for syphilis must be considered when evaluating and treating the infant

Clinical senario 2
  • Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and with one of the following:
    • Mother was not treated or inadequately treated, or has no documentation of having received treatment or
    • Mother was treated with erythromycin or another non-penicillin regimen or
    • Mother received treatment less than 4 weeks before delivery.

Recommended Evaluation

  • CSF analysis for VDRL, cell count, and protein
  • CBC, differential, and platelet count
  • Long-bone radiographs

Preferred regimen 1: Aqueous crystalline penicillin G 100,000-150,000 U/kg/day, administered as 50,000 U/kg/dose IV q12h during the first 7 days of life and q8h thereafter for a total of 10 days
Preferred regimen 2: Procaine penicillin G 50,000 U/kg/dose IM q24h for 10 days
Preferred regimen 3: Benzathine penicillin G 50,000 U/kg/dose IM single dose
Note: If the mother has untreated early syphilis at delivery, 10 days of parenteral therapy can be considered
Before using the single-dose benzathine penicillin G regimen, the complete evaluation (i.e., CSF examination, long-bone radiographs, and CBC with platelets) must be normal, and follow-up must be certain. If any part of the infant's evaluation is abnormal or not performed, if the CSF analysis is uninterpretable because of contamination with blood, or if follow-up is uncertain, a 10-day course of penicillin G is required. If the neonate's nontreponemal test is nonreactive and the provider determines that the mother's risk of untreated syphilis is low, treatment of the neonate with a single IM dose of benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg for possible incubating syphilis can be considered without an evaluation.
Neonates born to mothers with untreated early syphilis at the time of delivery are at increased risk for congenital syphilis, and the 10-day course of penicillin G may be considered even if the complete evaluation is normal and follow-up is certain.

Clinical senario 3
  • Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and
  • Mother was treated during pregnancy, treatment was appropriate for the stage of infection, and treatment was administered >4 weeks before delivery and
  • Mother has no evidence of reinfection or relapse.

Recommended Evaluation'

  • No evaluation recommended

Preferred regimen: Benzathine penicillin G 50,000 U/kg/dose IM single dose

Clinical senario 4
  • Infants who have a normal physical examination and a serum quantitative nontreponemal serologic titer the same or less than fourfold the maternal titer and
  • Mother's treatment was adequate before pregnancy and
  • Mother's nontreponemal serologic titer remained low and stable before and during pregnancy and at delivery (VDRL <1:2; RPR <1:4)

Recommended evaluation

  • No evaluation recommended
  • No treatment is required
  • Benzathine penicillin G 50,000 U/kg IM single dose might be considered, particularly if follow-up is uncertain
Follow up
  • All neonates with reactive nontreponemal tests should receive careful follow-up examinations and serologic testing (i.e., a nontreponemal test) every 2–3 months until the test becomes nonreactive.
  • In the neonate who was not treated because congenital syphilis was considered less likely or unlikely, nontreponemal antibody titers should decline by age 3 months and be nonreactive by age 6 months, indicating that the reactive test result was caused by passive transfer of maternal IgG antibody.
  • At 6 months, if the nontreponemal test is nonreactive, no further evaluation or treatment is needed; if the nontreponemal test is still reactive, the infant is likely to be infected and should be treated.
  • Treated neonates that exhibit persistent nontreponemal test titers by 6–12 months should be re-evaluated through CSF examination and managed in consultation with an expert. Retreatment with a 10-day course of a penicillin G regimen may be indicated.
  • Neonates with a negative nontreponemal test at birth and whose mothers were seroreactive at delivery should be retested at 3 months to rule out serologically negative incubating congenital syphilis at the time of birth.
  • Neonates whose initial CSF evaluations are abnormal should undergo a repeat lumbar puncture approximately every 6 months until the results are normal

Note: Treponemal tests should not be used to evaluate treatment response because the results are qualitative and passive transfer of maternal IgG treponemal antibody might persist for at least 15 months
A reactive CSF Venereal Disease Research Laboratory (VDRL) test or abnormal CSF indices that persist and cannot be attributed to other ongoing illness requires retreatment for possible neurosyphilis and should be managed in consultation with an expert.

Penicillin Allergy

Management of infants and children with congenital syphilis

CDC Recommendations for management of Infants and Children with Congenital Syphilis
Congenital Syphilis in infants and children

Recommended Evaluation

Preferred regimen: Aqueous crystalline penicillin G 50,000 U/kg q4–6h for 10 days

  • If the infant or child has no clinical manifestations of congenital syphilis and the evaluation (including the CSF examination) is normal, treatment with up to 3 weekly doses of benzathine penicillin G, 50,000 U/kg IM can be considered. A single dose of benzathine penicillin G 50,000 units/kg IM up to the adult dose of 2.4 million units in a single dose can be considered after the 10-day course of IV aqueous penicillin to provide more comparable duration of treatment in those who have no clinical manifestations and normal CSF. All of the above treatment regimens also would be adequate for children who might have other treponemal infections.
Follow Up
  • Careful follow-up examinations and serologic testing (i.e., a nontreponemal test) of infants and children treated for congenital syphilis after the neonatal period (30 days of age) should be performed every 3 months until the test becomes nonreactive or the titer has decreased fourfold.
  • If the titers increase at any point for more than 2 weeks or do not decrease fourfold after 12–18 months, the infant or child should be evaluated (e.g., through CSF examination), treated with a 10-day course of parenteral penicillin G, and managed in consultation with an expert.
  • Treponemal tests should not be used to evaluate treatment response, because the results are qualitative and persist after treatment; further, passive transfer of maternal IgG treponemal antibody might persist for at least 15 months after delivery.
  • Infants or children whose initial CSF evaluations are abnormal should undergo a repeat lumbar puncture approximately every 6 months until the results are normal. After 2 years of follow-up, a reactive CSF VDRL test or abnormal CSF indices that persists and cannot be attributed to other ongoing illness requires retreatment for possible neurosyphilis and should be managed in consultation with an expert.
Penicillin Allergy

References

  1. https://www.uspreventiveservicestaskforce.org/Page/Document/RecommendationStatementFinal/syphilis-infection-in-pregnancy-screening Accessed on september 27,2016
  2. http://www.cdc.gov/std/tg2015/references.htm#424 Accessed on September 27, 2016
  3. 3.0 3.1 Hollier LM, Harstad TW, Sanchez PJ, Twickler DM, Wendel GD (2001) Fetal syphilis: clinical and laboratory characteristics. Obstet Gynecol 97 (6):947-53. PMID: 11384701
  4. 4.0 4.1 "Sexually Transmitted Diseases Treatment Guidelines, 2010". Retrieved 2012-12-19.
  5. Alexander JM, Sheffield JS, Sanchez PJ, Mayfield J, Wendel GD (1999) Efficacy of treatment for syphilis in pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol 93 (1):5-8. PMID: 9916946
  6. 6.0 6.1 Walker GJ (2001) Antibiotics for syphilis diagnosed during pregnancy. Cochrane Database Syst Rev (3):CD001143. DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD001143 PMID: 11686978
  7. Wendel GD, Sheffield JS, Hollier LM, Hill JB, Ramsey PS, Sánchez PJ (2002) Treatment of syphilis in pregnancy and prevention of congenital syphilis. Clin Infect Dis 35 (Suppl 2):S200-9. DOI:10.1086/342108 PMID: 12353207
  8. Klein VR, Cox SM, Mitchell MD, Wendel GD (1990) The Jarisch-Herxheimer reaction complicating syphilotherapy in pregnancy. Obstet Gynecol 75 (3 Pt 1):375-80. PMID: 2304710
  9. Nathan L, Bawdon RE, Sidawi JE, Stettler RW, McIntire DM, Wendel GD (1993). "Penicillin levels following the administration of benzathine penicillin G in pregnancy". Obstet Gynecol. 82 (3): 338–42. PMID 8355931.

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