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What Do Sex Therapists Do? (Hint: It’s Not What You Think)

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Thu, 03/21/2024 - 15:41

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

Rachel S. Rubin, MD: We are here at the Harvard Continuing Medical Education Course in Orlando, Florida. It’s all about testosterone therapy and sexual medicine. I have with me today the wonderful Dr. Marianne Brandon, who is an amazing sex therapist. Could you introduce yourself?

Marianne Brandon, PhD: I am a clinical psychologist and sex therapist. I’ve been in practice for more than 25 years. I’m currently located in Sarasota. I have a Psychology Today blog called The Future of Intimacy, which I have a lot of fun with.

Dr. Rubin: It’s very important, when taking care of patients, that we work in a biopsychosocial model. Yes, we can fix erectile dysfunction. We can help with menopause symptoms and that helps sexual function. But what I find makes my patients able to live their best lives is when they have a team, including a mental health professional — often a sex therapist or a couples’ therapist — where they can learn communication skills. Why is it important for primary care doctors to talk to their patients about sex? My primary care doctor has never asked me about sex.  

Dr. Brandon: For most people, sexual intimacy is critical for their experience of life. It correlates with their relationship satisfaction and life satisfaction. It’s much bigger than what’s happening in the bedroom. People have more struggles than you realize. Sexual dysfunction correlates with emotional issues such as depression and anxiety, with medical problems, and with medication use. Chances are that your patients have some kind of sexual concern, even if that’s not to the degree that it would be classified as a sexual dysfunction.

But sexual concerns wreak havoc. Believing they have a sexual problem, they stop touching, they stop relating to their partner. It becomes a really big deal in their lives. If you can open the door for a conversation about sex with your patients, it could do them a great deal of good. It’s also good for the practitioner, because if your patients think they can talk with you about anything, that’s going to establish your relationship with them. Practitioners avoid these conversations because they don’t have the time or the training to offer help.

Dr. Rubin: You don’t have to know all the answers. You just have to show empathy and compassion and say, “I hear you.” That’s the magic in the doctor-patient relationship. We refer patients to specialists when we don’t know what to do. What happens when I send a patient to a sex therapist? Do they watch them have sex? Of course not, but everyone thinks that is what sex therapists do.

Dr. Brandon: Sex therapy is just like any other type of therapy, but we discuss sexual issues. And because just about anything that’s happening in your patient’s life can trickle down into the bedroom, we end up talking about a lot of stuff that’s not directly related to sex but ultimately impacts the patient’s sex life.

Dr. Rubin: It’s true. Most medical conditions that we treat — from diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol, and obesity to depression and anxiety — are strongly correlated with sexual health. We treat the underlying condition, but our patients don’t care about their A1c levels. They care about the fact that they cannot get aroused; their genitals don’t feel the same way they used to.

Dr. Brandon: I love that point because people make meaning out of their sexual concerns and dysfunction. Suddenly their body isn’t responding the way it used to. They think something’s wrong with them, or maybe they are with the wrong partner. This meaning becomes very powerful in their mind and perpetuates the sexual problem.

Dr. Rubin: First and foremost, we are educators. We can say, “You have pretty out-of-control diabetes,” or, “You’re a smoker, which can affect the health of your genitals. Have you noticed any issues going on there?” If you don’t ask, patients will not bring up their concerns with their doctors.

So how do people find a sex therapist?

Dr. Brandon: There are a few fabulous organizations that provide on their websites ways to find a therapist: the American Association of Sex Educators, Counselors and Therapists (AASECT) and Sex Therapy and Research (STAR). Giving patients this information is a huge intervention.

Other places to find a therapist include the International Society for Sexual Medicine, and the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health.

Since COVID, many therapists have gone virtual. Encourage your patients to look within their states to find options for therapists and psychologists. Recent legislation allows psychologists who have signed up for PSYPACT to practice almost throughout the entire United States. We used to think if we didn’t have a therapist in the community, we couldn’t make a referral. That›s not the case anymore.

Dr. Rubin: All doctors are really sexual medicine doctors. We can change the whole world by giving our patients a better quality of life.
 

Dr. Rubin, Assistant Clinical Professor, Department of Urology, Georgetown University, Washington, disclosed ties to Sprout, Maternal Medical, Absorption Pharmaceuticals, GlaxoSmithKline, and Endo.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Inexperience Diagnosing Syphilis Adding to Higher Rates

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Tue, 03/19/2024 - 13:41

With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

With rates of syphilis rising quickly in the United States and elsewhere, clinicians are having to up their game when it comes to diagnosing and treating an infection that they may not be paying enough attention to.

More than 200,000 cases of syphilis were reported in the United States in 2022, which is the highest number since 1950 and is a 17.3% increase over 2021, according to the latest figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The rate of infection has increased almost every year since a historic low in 2001.

And the trend is not limited to the United States. Last year, the infection rate in the United Kingdom hit a 50-year high, said David Mabey, BCh, DM, from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine. Syphilis and other sexually transmitted infections are also a major problem in low- and middle-income countries, he added, although good data are not always available.

Many of today’s healthcare professionals have little experience with the disease, shared Ina Park, MD, a sexually transmitted infections specialist at the University of California at San Francisco. “An entire generation of physicians — including myself — did not see any cases until we were well out of our training,” Dr. Park reported. “We’re really playing catch-up.”
 

A Centuries-Old Ailment

Dr. Park offered some advice on the challenges of diagnosing what can be an elusive infection at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) 2024 Annual Meeting in Denver. That advice boiled down to one simple rule: “Test, test, test.”

Because syphilis can mimic so many other conditions and can have long periods of latency, it can be easily missed or even misdiagnosed by experienced physicians, said Dr. Park. Clinicians need to keep it front of mind and have a lower threshold for testing, even if there are no obvious symptoms.

Following the CDC’s new recommendations for syphilis screening will help, she noted; every sexually active patient aged between 15 and 44 years who lives in a county with a syphilis infection rate of 4.6 per 100,000 people or higher should get the test. And clinicians should remain vigilant, even in areas with a lower prevalence. “If you can’t account for new symptoms in a sexually active patient, order a test,” said Dr. Park.
 

Complicated Cases

The lack of experience with syphilis affects not just diagnosis but also treatment, particularly for complex cases, said Khalil Ghanem, MD, PhD, from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore. “When you don’t have to deal with something for a while, you forget how to deal with it,” he added.

At CROI, Dr. Ghanem offered suggestions for how to navigate complicated cases of ocular syphilis, otic syphilis, and neurosyphilis, and how to interpret test results when a patient’s antigen titers are being “unruly.”

With potential ocular or otic syphilis, you shouldn’t wait for a specialist like an ophthalmologist to weigh in but instead refer the patient directly to the emergency department because of the risk that the symptoms may become irreversible and result in permanent blindness or deafness. “You don’t want to dilly-dally with those conditions,” Dr. Ghanem said.

Closely monitoring a patient’s rapid plasma regain and venereal disease research laboratory antigen levels is the only way to manage syphilis and to determine whether the infection is responding to treatment, he noted, but sometimes those titers “don’t do what you think they should be doing” and fail to decline or even go up after treatment.

“You don’t know if they went up because the patient was re-infected, or they developed neurosyphilis, or there was a problem at the lab,” he said. “It can be challenging to interpret.”

To decipher confusing test results, Dr. Ghanem recommended getting a detailed history to understand whether a patient is at risk for reinfection, whether there are signs of neurosyphilis or other complications, whether pregnancy is possible, and so on. “Based on the answers, you can determine what the most rational approach to treatment would be,” he shared.
 

 

 

Drug Shortages

Efforts to get the infection under control have become more complicated. Last summer, Pfizer announced that it had run out of penicillin G benzathine (Bicillin), an injectable, long-acting drug that is one of the main treatments for syphilis and the only one that can be given to pregnant people. Supplies for children ran out at the end of June 2023, and supplies for adults were gone by the end of September.

Because Pfizer is the only company that manufactures penicillin G benzathine, there is no one to pick up the slack in the short-term, so the shortage is expected to continue until at least the middle of 2024.

In response, the US Food and Drug Administration has temporarily allowed the use of benzylpenicillin benzathine (Extencilline), a French formulation that has not been approved in the United States, until supplies of penicillin G benzathine are stabilized.

The shortage has shone a spotlight on the important issue of a lack of alternatives for the treatment of syphilis during pregnancy, which increases the risk for congenital syphilis. “Hopefully, this pushes the National Institutes of Health and others to step up their game on studies for alternative drugs for use in pregnancy,” Dr. Ghanem said.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Doxy-PEP Cut STIs in San Francisco in Half

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Wed, 03/13/2024 - 14:11

Syphilis and chlamydia infections were reduced by half among men who have sex with men and transgender women 1 year after San Francisco rolled out doxycycline postexposure prophylaxis (doxy-PEP), according to data presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) this week.

After a clinical trial showed that doxy-PEP taken after sex reduced the chance of acquiring syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia by about two-thirds, the San Francisco Department of Public Health released the first guidelines in the country in October 2022. 

The guidelines recommend that a person take two 100-mg pills of doxycycline ideally in the 24 hours after but no more than 72 hours after condomless sex. So far, more than 3700 people in San Francisco have been prescribed doxy-PEP, reports Stephanie Cohen, MD, director of HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention in the Disease Prevention and Control Branch of Public Health.

Dr. Cohen and her colleagues spent a year monitoring the uptake of doxy-PEP and used a computer model to predict what the rates of sexually transmitted infection would have been without doxy-PEP. 

In November 2023, 13 months after the guidelines were introduced, they found that monthly chlamydia and early syphilis infections were 50% and 51% lower, respectively, than what was predicted by the model.
 

Fewer Infections

The drop in infections is having a tangible effect on patients in San Francisco, and many clinicians are noting that they are seeing far fewer positive tests. “The results that we’re seeing on a city-wide level are absolutely being experienced by individual providers and patients,” Dr. Cohen said.

However, the analysis showed no effect on rates of gonorrhea. It’s not clear why, although Dr. Cohen points out that doxy-PEP was less effective against gonorrhea in the clinical trial. And “there could be other factors in play,” she added. “Adherence might matter more, or it could be affected by the prevalence of tetracycline resistance in the community.”

With rates of STIs, particularly syphilis, quickly rising in recent years, healthcare providers have been scrambling to find effective interventions. So far, doxy-PEP has shown the most promise. “We’ve known for a while that all of the strategies we’ve been employing don’t seem to be working,” noted Chase Cannon, MD, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Washington in Seattle. “That’s why doxy-PEP is important. We haven’t had anything that can deflect the curve in a long time.”
 

What About the Side Effects?

Some concerns remain, however, about the widespread prophylactic use of antibiotics. There are no long-term safety data on the potential side effects of doxy-PEP, and there is still a lot of stigma around interventions that allow people to have sex the way they want, said Dr. Cannon.

But perhaps, the biggest concern is that doxy-PEP could contribute to antibiotic resistance. Those fears are not misplaced, Dr. Cannon added. The results of one study, presented in a poster at CROI, showed that stool samples from people prescribed doxy-PEP had elevated levels of bacterial genes that can confer resistance to tetracyclines, the class of antibiotics to which doxycycline belongs. There was no change in resistance to other classes of antibiotics and no difference in bacterial diversity over the 6 months of the study.

Dr. Cannon cautioned, however, that we can’t extrapolate these results to clinical outcomes. “We can look for signals [of resistance], but we don’t know if this means someone will fail therapy for chlamydia or syphilis,” he said.

There are still many challenges to overcome before doxy-PEP can be rolled out widely, Dr. Cohen explained. There is a lack of consensus among healthcare professionals about who should be offered doxy-PEP. The clinical trial results and the San Fransisco guidelines only apply to men who have sex with men and to transgender women.

Some clinicians argue that the intervention should be provided to a broader population, whereas others want to see more research to ensure that unnecessary antibiotic use is minimized.

So far just one study has tested doxy-PEP in another population — in women in Kenya — and it was found to not be effective. But the data suggest that adherence to the protocol was poor in that study, so the results may not be reliable, Dr. Cohen said.

“We need effective prevention tools for all genders, especially cis women who bear most of the morbidity,” she said. “It stands to reason that this should work for them, but without high-quality evidence, there is insufficient information to make a recommendation for cis women.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is currently reviewing public and expert comments and refining final guidelines for release in the coming months, which should alleviate some of the uncertainty. “Many providers are waiting for that guidance before they will feel confident moving forward,” Dr. Cohen noted.

But despite the risks and uncertainty, doxy-PEP looks set to be a major part of the fight against STIs going forward. “Doxy-PEP is essential for us as a nation to be dealing with the syphilis epidemic,” Carl Dieffenbach, PhD, director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said in a video introduction to CROI.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Syphilis and chlamydia infections were reduced by half among men who have sex with men and transgender women 1 year after San Francisco rolled out doxycycline postexposure prophylaxis (doxy-PEP), according to data presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) this week.

After a clinical trial showed that doxy-PEP taken after sex reduced the chance of acquiring syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia by about two-thirds, the San Francisco Department of Public Health released the first guidelines in the country in October 2022. 

The guidelines recommend that a person take two 100-mg pills of doxycycline ideally in the 24 hours after but no more than 72 hours after condomless sex. So far, more than 3700 people in San Francisco have been prescribed doxy-PEP, reports Stephanie Cohen, MD, director of HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention in the Disease Prevention and Control Branch of Public Health.

Dr. Cohen and her colleagues spent a year monitoring the uptake of doxy-PEP and used a computer model to predict what the rates of sexually transmitted infection would have been without doxy-PEP. 

In November 2023, 13 months after the guidelines were introduced, they found that monthly chlamydia and early syphilis infections were 50% and 51% lower, respectively, than what was predicted by the model.
 

Fewer Infections

The drop in infections is having a tangible effect on patients in San Francisco, and many clinicians are noting that they are seeing far fewer positive tests. “The results that we’re seeing on a city-wide level are absolutely being experienced by individual providers and patients,” Dr. Cohen said.

However, the analysis showed no effect on rates of gonorrhea. It’s not clear why, although Dr. Cohen points out that doxy-PEP was less effective against gonorrhea in the clinical trial. And “there could be other factors in play,” she added. “Adherence might matter more, or it could be affected by the prevalence of tetracycline resistance in the community.”

With rates of STIs, particularly syphilis, quickly rising in recent years, healthcare providers have been scrambling to find effective interventions. So far, doxy-PEP has shown the most promise. “We’ve known for a while that all of the strategies we’ve been employing don’t seem to be working,” noted Chase Cannon, MD, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Washington in Seattle. “That’s why doxy-PEP is important. We haven’t had anything that can deflect the curve in a long time.”
 

What About the Side Effects?

Some concerns remain, however, about the widespread prophylactic use of antibiotics. There are no long-term safety data on the potential side effects of doxy-PEP, and there is still a lot of stigma around interventions that allow people to have sex the way they want, said Dr. Cannon.

But perhaps, the biggest concern is that doxy-PEP could contribute to antibiotic resistance. Those fears are not misplaced, Dr. Cannon added. The results of one study, presented in a poster at CROI, showed that stool samples from people prescribed doxy-PEP had elevated levels of bacterial genes that can confer resistance to tetracyclines, the class of antibiotics to which doxycycline belongs. There was no change in resistance to other classes of antibiotics and no difference in bacterial diversity over the 6 months of the study.

Dr. Cannon cautioned, however, that we can’t extrapolate these results to clinical outcomes. “We can look for signals [of resistance], but we don’t know if this means someone will fail therapy for chlamydia or syphilis,” he said.

There are still many challenges to overcome before doxy-PEP can be rolled out widely, Dr. Cohen explained. There is a lack of consensus among healthcare professionals about who should be offered doxy-PEP. The clinical trial results and the San Fransisco guidelines only apply to men who have sex with men and to transgender women.

Some clinicians argue that the intervention should be provided to a broader population, whereas others want to see more research to ensure that unnecessary antibiotic use is minimized.

So far just one study has tested doxy-PEP in another population — in women in Kenya — and it was found to not be effective. But the data suggest that adherence to the protocol was poor in that study, so the results may not be reliable, Dr. Cohen said.

“We need effective prevention tools for all genders, especially cis women who bear most of the morbidity,” she said. “It stands to reason that this should work for them, but without high-quality evidence, there is insufficient information to make a recommendation for cis women.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is currently reviewing public and expert comments and refining final guidelines for release in the coming months, which should alleviate some of the uncertainty. “Many providers are waiting for that guidance before they will feel confident moving forward,” Dr. Cohen noted.

But despite the risks and uncertainty, doxy-PEP looks set to be a major part of the fight against STIs going forward. “Doxy-PEP is essential for us as a nation to be dealing with the syphilis epidemic,” Carl Dieffenbach, PhD, director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said in a video introduction to CROI.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Syphilis and chlamydia infections were reduced by half among men who have sex with men and transgender women 1 year after San Francisco rolled out doxycycline postexposure prophylaxis (doxy-PEP), according to data presented at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) this week.

After a clinical trial showed that doxy-PEP taken after sex reduced the chance of acquiring syphilis, gonorrhea, and chlamydia by about two-thirds, the San Francisco Department of Public Health released the first guidelines in the country in October 2022. 

The guidelines recommend that a person take two 100-mg pills of doxycycline ideally in the 24 hours after but no more than 72 hours after condomless sex. So far, more than 3700 people in San Francisco have been prescribed doxy-PEP, reports Stephanie Cohen, MD, director of HIV and sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention in the Disease Prevention and Control Branch of Public Health.

Dr. Cohen and her colleagues spent a year monitoring the uptake of doxy-PEP and used a computer model to predict what the rates of sexually transmitted infection would have been without doxy-PEP. 

In November 2023, 13 months after the guidelines were introduced, they found that monthly chlamydia and early syphilis infections were 50% and 51% lower, respectively, than what was predicted by the model.
 

Fewer Infections

The drop in infections is having a tangible effect on patients in San Francisco, and many clinicians are noting that they are seeing far fewer positive tests. “The results that we’re seeing on a city-wide level are absolutely being experienced by individual providers and patients,” Dr. Cohen said.

However, the analysis showed no effect on rates of gonorrhea. It’s not clear why, although Dr. Cohen points out that doxy-PEP was less effective against gonorrhea in the clinical trial. And “there could be other factors in play,” she added. “Adherence might matter more, or it could be affected by the prevalence of tetracycline resistance in the community.”

With rates of STIs, particularly syphilis, quickly rising in recent years, healthcare providers have been scrambling to find effective interventions. So far, doxy-PEP has shown the most promise. “We’ve known for a while that all of the strategies we’ve been employing don’t seem to be working,” noted Chase Cannon, MD, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Washington in Seattle. “That’s why doxy-PEP is important. We haven’t had anything that can deflect the curve in a long time.”
 

What About the Side Effects?

Some concerns remain, however, about the widespread prophylactic use of antibiotics. There are no long-term safety data on the potential side effects of doxy-PEP, and there is still a lot of stigma around interventions that allow people to have sex the way they want, said Dr. Cannon.

But perhaps, the biggest concern is that doxy-PEP could contribute to antibiotic resistance. Those fears are not misplaced, Dr. Cannon added. The results of one study, presented in a poster at CROI, showed that stool samples from people prescribed doxy-PEP had elevated levels of bacterial genes that can confer resistance to tetracyclines, the class of antibiotics to which doxycycline belongs. There was no change in resistance to other classes of antibiotics and no difference in bacterial diversity over the 6 months of the study.

Dr. Cannon cautioned, however, that we can’t extrapolate these results to clinical outcomes. “We can look for signals [of resistance], but we don’t know if this means someone will fail therapy for chlamydia or syphilis,” he said.

There are still many challenges to overcome before doxy-PEP can be rolled out widely, Dr. Cohen explained. There is a lack of consensus among healthcare professionals about who should be offered doxy-PEP. The clinical trial results and the San Fransisco guidelines only apply to men who have sex with men and to transgender women.

Some clinicians argue that the intervention should be provided to a broader population, whereas others want to see more research to ensure that unnecessary antibiotic use is minimized.

So far just one study has tested doxy-PEP in another population — in women in Kenya — and it was found to not be effective. But the data suggest that adherence to the protocol was poor in that study, so the results may not be reliable, Dr. Cohen said.

“We need effective prevention tools for all genders, especially cis women who bear most of the morbidity,” she said. “It stands to reason that this should work for them, but without high-quality evidence, there is insufficient information to make a recommendation for cis women.”

The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is currently reviewing public and expert comments and refining final guidelines for release in the coming months, which should alleviate some of the uncertainty. “Many providers are waiting for that guidance before they will feel confident moving forward,” Dr. Cohen noted.

But despite the risks and uncertainty, doxy-PEP looks set to be a major part of the fight against STIs going forward. “Doxy-PEP is essential for us as a nation to be dealing with the syphilis epidemic,” Carl Dieffenbach, PhD, director of the Division of AIDS at the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease, said in a video introduction to CROI.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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‘Where Have My Orgasms Gone?’ Sex Medicine and Older Women

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Changed
Wed, 02/28/2024 - 07:24

“She’s, like, 90 years old. I’m not going to ask her about sex!” says the cringing resident. “She’s older than my grandmother!”

Well, my young friend, our 80- and 90-year-old patients were in their 20s and 30s in the 1960s. You can bet some of them were pretty groovy! A Swedish study of septuagenarians revealed a shift in sexual attitudes: from 5% of 70-year-old women in the 1970s citing sex as a positive aspect of life, to 78% in 2000. Those of us in practice who came of age during the AIDS era and alongside the purity movement of the 1990s can be more sexually reserved than our grandparents. We might need to catch up. In fact, in another study, 82% of 97-year-old female participants felt that being asked about their sexuality in healthcare settings was positive.

While changes do occur in sexual physiology and behavior with age, satisfying sexual engagement may be an important factor in the general well-being and overall health of older women. Given the high prevalence of dementia among this population, it may be useful to know that positive sexual expression may delay cognitive decline. We also have evidence that sexual satisfaction is important for relational health, which in turn helps predict physical health.

Shed the Dysfunction Mindset

Our medical bias has been that a fulfilling sexual life requires a hard penis and a lubricated vagina. This view of the range of healthy and satisfying sexual expression is lamentably limited. Older adults may have more problems with physiologic arousal in the form of more erectile dysfunction and decreased vaginal lubrication, but these issues may lead to partnerships in which there is less insertive/receiving sexual play and more oral sex, cuddling, kissing, and other forms of partnered sexual play. Older adults may focus less on performance and more on intimacy. In fact, as heterosexual couples encounter these physiologic changes, their sexual behavior may begin to focus more attention to female pleasure. Good news for older women!

As described by Dutch sexuality and aging expert Woet Gianotten, MD, older adults have a lot going for them in their sex lives. Many are retired with more time available, less work stress, greater comfort and familiarity with their partners, and less insecurity about their bodies.

Common Concerns

Many older adults are having satisfying sexual play and are less bothered by changes in their sexual physiology. Still, for those who aren’t happy with their sex lives, clinicians must be ready to address these concerns.

Nancy, an 87-year-old patient whose husband died 5 years ago after 59 years of marriage, has just met someone new. When they are intimate physically, she’s not feeling aroused in the way she recalls, and wonders, Where have my orgasms gone?

A host of physical changes among older women can affect the sexual experience, including the vulvovaginal changes of genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), incontinence, uterine prolapse, diminished sensation, and reduced overall mobility. Although aging is responsible for some of these changes, chronic diseases and medical treatments can play an even larger role.

GSM is a major contributor to sexual pain, genital irritation, and reduced arousal and orgasm. It’s crazy that we don’t ask about and treat GSM. Beyond the sexual impact, the vaginal dryness of GSM can contribute to urinary tract infections, which can lead to sepsis and even death! Vaginal estrogens and other GSM treatments are safe and effective in the vast majority of women. Vaginal moisturizers, vaginal dilators, and increasing genital blood flow also help improve GSM.

Vaginal dilators are used in the management of vaginal stenosis, when the vaginal skin has contracted as a result of GSM or pelvic radiation to treat cancer. Dilators are also used to treat some forms of high-tone pelvic floor dysfunction. For expert guidance and coaching on the use of dilators, seek out sexual medicine specialists and pelvic floor physical therapists. Pelvic floor physical therapy is important in the management of a wide range of sexual concerns, from reduced arousal and orgasm to almost any kind of sexual pain.

For postmenopausal women who are distressed by hypoactive sexual desire disorder, transdermal low-dose testosterone may be considered when other causes of low libido have been ruled out.

Due to changes in nerve fiber sensitivity over time, older age is an ideal phase of life to incorporate higher-intensity vibration and other sexual devices into solo and partner sex. Mobility limitations and joint pain can be addressed with devices designed specifically for this purpose or with the use of pillows and other supports.

As Betty Dodson, a staunch advocate for women’s pleasure until her death in 2020 at 91, wisely said, “Masturbation will get you through childhood, puberty, romance, marriage, and divorce, and it will see you through old age.” We can encourage women to see sexual play and pleasure flexibly, as a lifelong process of self-knowledge and discovery.

 

 

Basic Tips for Patients

  • More “fiction and friction,” as coined by sex therapist Barry McCarthy, is necessary. As bodies age, more stimulation, both mental and physical, is necessary and often requires more direct physical stimulation of genitals.
  • More time: Everything seems to take more time as we age; sex is no different.
  • Incontinence concerns can be addressed by open communication and collaboration with partners, and being prepared with waterproof pads for the bed and towels.
  • Ask about medical intervention–related sexual side effects. A wide range of medications can decrease desire and arousal and delay orgasm. If a change in sexual function occurred with starting a medication, it may be worthwhile investigating alternatives or, if possible, discontinuing a medication. Surgical and procedural changes to the anatomy also can affect sexual function. While correction may be impossible once certain changes have occurred, clinicians can provide patients with both validation about the problem and hope that, for the most part, with creativity and flexibility, pleasurable sexual experience is possible in all bodies.

Pebble M. Kranz, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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“She’s, like, 90 years old. I’m not going to ask her about sex!” says the cringing resident. “She’s older than my grandmother!”

Well, my young friend, our 80- and 90-year-old patients were in their 20s and 30s in the 1960s. You can bet some of them were pretty groovy! A Swedish study of septuagenarians revealed a shift in sexual attitudes: from 5% of 70-year-old women in the 1970s citing sex as a positive aspect of life, to 78% in 2000. Those of us in practice who came of age during the AIDS era and alongside the purity movement of the 1990s can be more sexually reserved than our grandparents. We might need to catch up. In fact, in another study, 82% of 97-year-old female participants felt that being asked about their sexuality in healthcare settings was positive.

While changes do occur in sexual physiology and behavior with age, satisfying sexual engagement may be an important factor in the general well-being and overall health of older women. Given the high prevalence of dementia among this population, it may be useful to know that positive sexual expression may delay cognitive decline. We also have evidence that sexual satisfaction is important for relational health, which in turn helps predict physical health.

Shed the Dysfunction Mindset

Our medical bias has been that a fulfilling sexual life requires a hard penis and a lubricated vagina. This view of the range of healthy and satisfying sexual expression is lamentably limited. Older adults may have more problems with physiologic arousal in the form of more erectile dysfunction and decreased vaginal lubrication, but these issues may lead to partnerships in which there is less insertive/receiving sexual play and more oral sex, cuddling, kissing, and other forms of partnered sexual play. Older adults may focus less on performance and more on intimacy. In fact, as heterosexual couples encounter these physiologic changes, their sexual behavior may begin to focus more attention to female pleasure. Good news for older women!

As described by Dutch sexuality and aging expert Woet Gianotten, MD, older adults have a lot going for them in their sex lives. Many are retired with more time available, less work stress, greater comfort and familiarity with their partners, and less insecurity about their bodies.

Common Concerns

Many older adults are having satisfying sexual play and are less bothered by changes in their sexual physiology. Still, for those who aren’t happy with their sex lives, clinicians must be ready to address these concerns.

Nancy, an 87-year-old patient whose husband died 5 years ago after 59 years of marriage, has just met someone new. When they are intimate physically, she’s not feeling aroused in the way she recalls, and wonders, Where have my orgasms gone?

A host of physical changes among older women can affect the sexual experience, including the vulvovaginal changes of genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), incontinence, uterine prolapse, diminished sensation, and reduced overall mobility. Although aging is responsible for some of these changes, chronic diseases and medical treatments can play an even larger role.

GSM is a major contributor to sexual pain, genital irritation, and reduced arousal and orgasm. It’s crazy that we don’t ask about and treat GSM. Beyond the sexual impact, the vaginal dryness of GSM can contribute to urinary tract infections, which can lead to sepsis and even death! Vaginal estrogens and other GSM treatments are safe and effective in the vast majority of women. Vaginal moisturizers, vaginal dilators, and increasing genital blood flow also help improve GSM.

Vaginal dilators are used in the management of vaginal stenosis, when the vaginal skin has contracted as a result of GSM or pelvic radiation to treat cancer. Dilators are also used to treat some forms of high-tone pelvic floor dysfunction. For expert guidance and coaching on the use of dilators, seek out sexual medicine specialists and pelvic floor physical therapists. Pelvic floor physical therapy is important in the management of a wide range of sexual concerns, from reduced arousal and orgasm to almost any kind of sexual pain.

For postmenopausal women who are distressed by hypoactive sexual desire disorder, transdermal low-dose testosterone may be considered when other causes of low libido have been ruled out.

Due to changes in nerve fiber sensitivity over time, older age is an ideal phase of life to incorporate higher-intensity vibration and other sexual devices into solo and partner sex. Mobility limitations and joint pain can be addressed with devices designed specifically for this purpose or with the use of pillows and other supports.

As Betty Dodson, a staunch advocate for women’s pleasure until her death in 2020 at 91, wisely said, “Masturbation will get you through childhood, puberty, romance, marriage, and divorce, and it will see you through old age.” We can encourage women to see sexual play and pleasure flexibly, as a lifelong process of self-knowledge and discovery.

 

 

Basic Tips for Patients

  • More “fiction and friction,” as coined by sex therapist Barry McCarthy, is necessary. As bodies age, more stimulation, both mental and physical, is necessary and often requires more direct physical stimulation of genitals.
  • More time: Everything seems to take more time as we age; sex is no different.
  • Incontinence concerns can be addressed by open communication and collaboration with partners, and being prepared with waterproof pads for the bed and towels.
  • Ask about medical intervention–related sexual side effects. A wide range of medications can decrease desire and arousal and delay orgasm. If a change in sexual function occurred with starting a medication, it may be worthwhile investigating alternatives or, if possible, discontinuing a medication. Surgical and procedural changes to the anatomy also can affect sexual function. While correction may be impossible once certain changes have occurred, clinicians can provide patients with both validation about the problem and hope that, for the most part, with creativity and flexibility, pleasurable sexual experience is possible in all bodies.

Pebble M. Kranz, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

“She’s, like, 90 years old. I’m not going to ask her about sex!” says the cringing resident. “She’s older than my grandmother!”

Well, my young friend, our 80- and 90-year-old patients were in their 20s and 30s in the 1960s. You can bet some of them were pretty groovy! A Swedish study of septuagenarians revealed a shift in sexual attitudes: from 5% of 70-year-old women in the 1970s citing sex as a positive aspect of life, to 78% in 2000. Those of us in practice who came of age during the AIDS era and alongside the purity movement of the 1990s can be more sexually reserved than our grandparents. We might need to catch up. In fact, in another study, 82% of 97-year-old female participants felt that being asked about their sexuality in healthcare settings was positive.

While changes do occur in sexual physiology and behavior with age, satisfying sexual engagement may be an important factor in the general well-being and overall health of older women. Given the high prevalence of dementia among this population, it may be useful to know that positive sexual expression may delay cognitive decline. We also have evidence that sexual satisfaction is important for relational health, which in turn helps predict physical health.

Shed the Dysfunction Mindset

Our medical bias has been that a fulfilling sexual life requires a hard penis and a lubricated vagina. This view of the range of healthy and satisfying sexual expression is lamentably limited. Older adults may have more problems with physiologic arousal in the form of more erectile dysfunction and decreased vaginal lubrication, but these issues may lead to partnerships in which there is less insertive/receiving sexual play and more oral sex, cuddling, kissing, and other forms of partnered sexual play. Older adults may focus less on performance and more on intimacy. In fact, as heterosexual couples encounter these physiologic changes, their sexual behavior may begin to focus more attention to female pleasure. Good news for older women!

As described by Dutch sexuality and aging expert Woet Gianotten, MD, older adults have a lot going for them in their sex lives. Many are retired with more time available, less work stress, greater comfort and familiarity with their partners, and less insecurity about their bodies.

Common Concerns

Many older adults are having satisfying sexual play and are less bothered by changes in their sexual physiology. Still, for those who aren’t happy with their sex lives, clinicians must be ready to address these concerns.

Nancy, an 87-year-old patient whose husband died 5 years ago after 59 years of marriage, has just met someone new. When they are intimate physically, she’s not feeling aroused in the way she recalls, and wonders, Where have my orgasms gone?

A host of physical changes among older women can affect the sexual experience, including the vulvovaginal changes of genitourinary syndrome of menopause (GSM), incontinence, uterine prolapse, diminished sensation, and reduced overall mobility. Although aging is responsible for some of these changes, chronic diseases and medical treatments can play an even larger role.

GSM is a major contributor to sexual pain, genital irritation, and reduced arousal and orgasm. It’s crazy that we don’t ask about and treat GSM. Beyond the sexual impact, the vaginal dryness of GSM can contribute to urinary tract infections, which can lead to sepsis and even death! Vaginal estrogens and other GSM treatments are safe and effective in the vast majority of women. Vaginal moisturizers, vaginal dilators, and increasing genital blood flow also help improve GSM.

Vaginal dilators are used in the management of vaginal stenosis, when the vaginal skin has contracted as a result of GSM or pelvic radiation to treat cancer. Dilators are also used to treat some forms of high-tone pelvic floor dysfunction. For expert guidance and coaching on the use of dilators, seek out sexual medicine specialists and pelvic floor physical therapists. Pelvic floor physical therapy is important in the management of a wide range of sexual concerns, from reduced arousal and orgasm to almost any kind of sexual pain.

For postmenopausal women who are distressed by hypoactive sexual desire disorder, transdermal low-dose testosterone may be considered when other causes of low libido have been ruled out.

Due to changes in nerve fiber sensitivity over time, older age is an ideal phase of life to incorporate higher-intensity vibration and other sexual devices into solo and partner sex. Mobility limitations and joint pain can be addressed with devices designed specifically for this purpose or with the use of pillows and other supports.

As Betty Dodson, a staunch advocate for women’s pleasure until her death in 2020 at 91, wisely said, “Masturbation will get you through childhood, puberty, romance, marriage, and divorce, and it will see you through old age.” We can encourage women to see sexual play and pleasure flexibly, as a lifelong process of self-knowledge and discovery.

 

 

Basic Tips for Patients

  • More “fiction and friction,” as coined by sex therapist Barry McCarthy, is necessary. As bodies age, more stimulation, both mental and physical, is necessary and often requires more direct physical stimulation of genitals.
  • More time: Everything seems to take more time as we age; sex is no different.
  • Incontinence concerns can be addressed by open communication and collaboration with partners, and being prepared with waterproof pads for the bed and towels.
  • Ask about medical intervention–related sexual side effects. A wide range of medications can decrease desire and arousal and delay orgasm. If a change in sexual function occurred with starting a medication, it may be worthwhile investigating alternatives or, if possible, discontinuing a medication. Surgical and procedural changes to the anatomy also can affect sexual function. While correction may be impossible once certain changes have occurred, clinicians can provide patients with both validation about the problem and hope that, for the most part, with creativity and flexibility, pleasurable sexual experience is possible in all bodies.

Pebble M. Kranz, MD, has disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Long-Term Follow-Up Emphasizes HPV Vaccination Importance

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Thu, 02/15/2024 - 15:49

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

I want to briefly discuss a critically important topic that cannot be overly emphasized. It is the relevance, the importance, the benefits, and the outcome of HPV vaccination.

The paper I’m referring to was published in Pediatrics in October 2023. It’s titled, “Ten-Year Follow-up of 9-Valent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Immunogenicity, Effectiveness, and Safety.”

Let me emphasize that we’re talking about a 10-year follow-up. In this particular paper and analysis, 301 boys — I emphasize boys — were included and 971 girls at 40 different sites in 13 countries, who received the 9-valent vaccine, which includes HPV 16, 18, and seven other types.

These investigators demonstrated that the seropositivity rate 10 years after vaccination remained high for all nine types they looked at. Most importantly, there was not a single case. Not one. Let me repeat this: There was not a single case of high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia, or worse, or condyloma in either males or females. There was not a single case in over 1000 individuals with a follow-up of more than 10 years.

It is difficult to overstate the magnitude of the benefit associated with HPV vaccination for our children and young adults on their risk of developing highly relevant, life-changing, potentially deadly cancers.

For those of you who are interested in this topic — which should include almost all of you, if not all of you — I encourage you to read this very important follow-up paper, again, demonstrating the simple, overwhelming magnitude of the benefit of HPV vaccination. I thank you for your attention.
 

Dr. Markman is a professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research, City of Hope, Duarte, California, and president of medicine and science, City of Hope Atlanta, Chicago, and Phoenix. He disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline; AstraZeneca.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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This transcript has been edited for clarity.

I want to briefly discuss a critically important topic that cannot be overly emphasized. It is the relevance, the importance, the benefits, and the outcome of HPV vaccination.

The paper I’m referring to was published in Pediatrics in October 2023. It’s titled, “Ten-Year Follow-up of 9-Valent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Immunogenicity, Effectiveness, and Safety.”

Let me emphasize that we’re talking about a 10-year follow-up. In this particular paper and analysis, 301 boys — I emphasize boys — were included and 971 girls at 40 different sites in 13 countries, who received the 9-valent vaccine, which includes HPV 16, 18, and seven other types.

These investigators demonstrated that the seropositivity rate 10 years after vaccination remained high for all nine types they looked at. Most importantly, there was not a single case. Not one. Let me repeat this: There was not a single case of high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia, or worse, or condyloma in either males or females. There was not a single case in over 1000 individuals with a follow-up of more than 10 years.

It is difficult to overstate the magnitude of the benefit associated with HPV vaccination for our children and young adults on their risk of developing highly relevant, life-changing, potentially deadly cancers.

For those of you who are interested in this topic — which should include almost all of you, if not all of you — I encourage you to read this very important follow-up paper, again, demonstrating the simple, overwhelming magnitude of the benefit of HPV vaccination. I thank you for your attention.
 

Dr. Markman is a professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research, City of Hope, Duarte, California, and president of medicine and science, City of Hope Atlanta, Chicago, and Phoenix. He disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline; AstraZeneca.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

This transcript has been edited for clarity.

I want to briefly discuss a critically important topic that cannot be overly emphasized. It is the relevance, the importance, the benefits, and the outcome of HPV vaccination.

The paper I’m referring to was published in Pediatrics in October 2023. It’s titled, “Ten-Year Follow-up of 9-Valent Human Papillomavirus Vaccine: Immunogenicity, Effectiveness, and Safety.”

Let me emphasize that we’re talking about a 10-year follow-up. In this particular paper and analysis, 301 boys — I emphasize boys — were included and 971 girls at 40 different sites in 13 countries, who received the 9-valent vaccine, which includes HPV 16, 18, and seven other types.

These investigators demonstrated that the seropositivity rate 10 years after vaccination remained high for all nine types they looked at. Most importantly, there was not a single case. Not one. Let me repeat this: There was not a single case of high-grade intraepithelial neoplasia, or worse, or condyloma in either males or females. There was not a single case in over 1000 individuals with a follow-up of more than 10 years.

It is difficult to overstate the magnitude of the benefit associated with HPV vaccination for our children and young adults on their risk of developing highly relevant, life-changing, potentially deadly cancers.

For those of you who are interested in this topic — which should include almost all of you, if not all of you — I encourage you to read this very important follow-up paper, again, demonstrating the simple, overwhelming magnitude of the benefit of HPV vaccination. I thank you for your attention.
 

Dr. Markman is a professor in the department of medical oncology and therapeutics research, City of Hope, Duarte, California, and president of medicine and science, City of Hope Atlanta, Chicago, and Phoenix. He disclosed ties with GlaxoSmithKline; AstraZeneca.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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HPV Positive Test: How to Address Patients’ Anxieties

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Changed
Mon, 02/12/2024 - 10:07

Faced with a positive human papillomavirus (HPV) test, patients are quickly overwhelmed by anxiety-inducing questions. It is crucial to provide them with adequate responses to reassure them, emphasized Jean-Louis Mergui, MD, president of the International Federation for Colposcopy, during the press conference of the Congress of the French Society of Colposcopy and Cervico-Vaginal Pathology.

“Do I have cancer? When did I catch this papillomavirus? Is it dangerous for my partner? How do I get rid of it?” “Not everyone is equipped to answer these four questions. However, it is extremely important that healthcare professionals provide correct answers to patients so that they stop worrying,” Dr. Mergui explained.
 

Papillomavirus and Cancer

One of the first instincts of patients who receive a positive HPV test is to turn to the Internet. There, they read about “high-risk HPV, which is potentially oncogenic,” and become completely panicked, said Dr. Mergui.

However, among women, the probability of having a high-grade CIN3 lesion or higher on the cervix when the HPV test is positive is about 7%, according to the ATHENA study. “About 93% of patients do not have a severe lesion on the cervix. That’s why colposcopy is not performed on all patients. They need to be reassured,” said Dr. Mergui. When the papillomavirus persists, there is a risk for a cervical lesion. After 11 years, between 20% and 30% of patients develop a high-grade lesion on the cervix. However, on average, a high-risk HPV is spontaneously eliminated within 1-2 years. “After 14 months, 50% of women will test negative for their papillomavirus,” Dr. Mergui noted.

“High-risk HPV does not mean there is a lesion; it means there is a risk of developing a lesion on the cervix one day. That’s why these patients need to be monitored and explored,” he added.

In practice, when a patient aged between 30 and 65 years has a positive HPV test, cytology is performed to look for lesions. Only in the case of an abnormal smear, ASC-US, is colposcopy recommended. In the absence of a lesion, a control HPV test is conducted 1 year later to monitor virus persistence.

It should be noted that patients who have been treated for a cervical lesion have a five times higher risk of developing invasive cervical, vaginal, or vulvar cancer. Therefore, treated patients must be monitored once every 3 years for life.
 

Time of Infection

Many patients ask, “When did I catch this papillomavirus?” In response, Dr. Mergui first emphasized that HPV infection is common. “Between ages 15 and 30 years, most of us are infected with a high-risk HPV. When we look at the incidence between ages 15 and 25 years, every year, 20% of all young girls are infected with HPV, including 17% with high-risk HPV. The virus is usually caught within the first 5 years of sexual activity, and typically disappears after about a year,” he explained.

However, the most disturbing scenario for patients is when their last examination was negative, and there is no apparent reason for having caught the virus since then. Suspicion often falls on the partner. Once again, the gynecologist seeks to reassure.

It is possible that the last time screening was conducted, the virus was not sought (HPV test), but rather cervical lesions were sought by smear. However, a normal smear does not mean that the papillomavirus is not present. A negative cytology does not mean a negative HPV test. As we have seen, the virus is not always associated with the presence of a lesion, explained Dr. Mergui.

Also, having had a negative HPV test a few years earlier does not mean that one was not already infected. The HPV test determines the quantity of virus. Therefore, it is possible that the virus was present in small quantities that were without clinical significance (hence, a negative test). However, a few years later, the virus may have multiplied, and the HPV test became positive.

“Sometimes, the virus re-emerges 40, 50 years after infection due to age-related immune decline,” said Dr. Mergui. “So, just because the smear was negative or the HPV test was negative at the last examination does not mean that one was infected between the two.” Moreover, only 15% of couples have the same virus present on the penis or vagina, he pointed out.
 

 

 

Protecting One’s Partner

Once the diagnosis is made, it is often too late to protect the partner because they have already been infected. “It is certain that the partner will be infected or has already been infected because when the patient comes to you with a positive HPV test, she has already had sexual intercourse. It is worth noting that the virus can be transmitted through digital touching, and condoms are not very effective in preventing virus transmission,” said Dr. Mergui.

The speaker further clarified that the risk for men is much lower than that for women. “In women, about 40,000 lesions linked to high-risk HPV types, precancerous or cancerous, are observed every year. In men, this number is 1900. So, this represents 20 times fewer neoplastic lesions in men. The problem in men is oropharyngeal lesions, which are three times more common than in women. However, there is no screening for oropharyngeal cancer.”

So, when should the partner consult? Dr. Mergui advised consulting when there are clinically visible lesions (small warts, bumps, or ear, nose, and throat symptoms). “I do not recommend systematic examination of male or female partners,” he added.
 

Clearing the Virus

There are treatments for cervical lesions but not for papillomavirus infection.

“The only thing that can be suggested is quitting smoking, which increases viral clearance, thus reducing viral load. Also, the use of condoms helps improve viral clearance, but when women have a stable relationship, it seems unrealistic to think they will constantly use condoms. Finally, the prophylactic vaccine has been proposed, but it does not treat the infection. In fact, the real solution is to tell patients that they need to continue regular monitoring,” said Dr. Mergui.

“It should be noted that an ongoing study at the European level seems to show that when women who have undergone surgical treatment for a high-grade cervical lesion are vaccinated at the time of treatment or just after treatment, it reduces the risk of recurrence by 50%. So, the risk of recurrence is around 7%-8%. This strategy could be interesting, but for now, there is no official recommendation,” Dr. Mergui concluded.
 

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Faced with a positive human papillomavirus (HPV) test, patients are quickly overwhelmed by anxiety-inducing questions. It is crucial to provide them with adequate responses to reassure them, emphasized Jean-Louis Mergui, MD, president of the International Federation for Colposcopy, during the press conference of the Congress of the French Society of Colposcopy and Cervico-Vaginal Pathology.

“Do I have cancer? When did I catch this papillomavirus? Is it dangerous for my partner? How do I get rid of it?” “Not everyone is equipped to answer these four questions. However, it is extremely important that healthcare professionals provide correct answers to patients so that they stop worrying,” Dr. Mergui explained.
 

Papillomavirus and Cancer

One of the first instincts of patients who receive a positive HPV test is to turn to the Internet. There, they read about “high-risk HPV, which is potentially oncogenic,” and become completely panicked, said Dr. Mergui.

However, among women, the probability of having a high-grade CIN3 lesion or higher on the cervix when the HPV test is positive is about 7%, according to the ATHENA study. “About 93% of patients do not have a severe lesion on the cervix. That’s why colposcopy is not performed on all patients. They need to be reassured,” said Dr. Mergui. When the papillomavirus persists, there is a risk for a cervical lesion. After 11 years, between 20% and 30% of patients develop a high-grade lesion on the cervix. However, on average, a high-risk HPV is spontaneously eliminated within 1-2 years. “After 14 months, 50% of women will test negative for their papillomavirus,” Dr. Mergui noted.

“High-risk HPV does not mean there is a lesion; it means there is a risk of developing a lesion on the cervix one day. That’s why these patients need to be monitored and explored,” he added.

In practice, when a patient aged between 30 and 65 years has a positive HPV test, cytology is performed to look for lesions. Only in the case of an abnormal smear, ASC-US, is colposcopy recommended. In the absence of a lesion, a control HPV test is conducted 1 year later to monitor virus persistence.

It should be noted that patients who have been treated for a cervical lesion have a five times higher risk of developing invasive cervical, vaginal, or vulvar cancer. Therefore, treated patients must be monitored once every 3 years for life.
 

Time of Infection

Many patients ask, “When did I catch this papillomavirus?” In response, Dr. Mergui first emphasized that HPV infection is common. “Between ages 15 and 30 years, most of us are infected with a high-risk HPV. When we look at the incidence between ages 15 and 25 years, every year, 20% of all young girls are infected with HPV, including 17% with high-risk HPV. The virus is usually caught within the first 5 years of sexual activity, and typically disappears after about a year,” he explained.

However, the most disturbing scenario for patients is when their last examination was negative, and there is no apparent reason for having caught the virus since then. Suspicion often falls on the partner. Once again, the gynecologist seeks to reassure.

It is possible that the last time screening was conducted, the virus was not sought (HPV test), but rather cervical lesions were sought by smear. However, a normal smear does not mean that the papillomavirus is not present. A negative cytology does not mean a negative HPV test. As we have seen, the virus is not always associated with the presence of a lesion, explained Dr. Mergui.

Also, having had a negative HPV test a few years earlier does not mean that one was not already infected. The HPV test determines the quantity of virus. Therefore, it is possible that the virus was present in small quantities that were without clinical significance (hence, a negative test). However, a few years later, the virus may have multiplied, and the HPV test became positive.

“Sometimes, the virus re-emerges 40, 50 years after infection due to age-related immune decline,” said Dr. Mergui. “So, just because the smear was negative or the HPV test was negative at the last examination does not mean that one was infected between the two.” Moreover, only 15% of couples have the same virus present on the penis or vagina, he pointed out.
 

 

 

Protecting One’s Partner

Once the diagnosis is made, it is often too late to protect the partner because they have already been infected. “It is certain that the partner will be infected or has already been infected because when the patient comes to you with a positive HPV test, she has already had sexual intercourse. It is worth noting that the virus can be transmitted through digital touching, and condoms are not very effective in preventing virus transmission,” said Dr. Mergui.

The speaker further clarified that the risk for men is much lower than that for women. “In women, about 40,000 lesions linked to high-risk HPV types, precancerous or cancerous, are observed every year. In men, this number is 1900. So, this represents 20 times fewer neoplastic lesions in men. The problem in men is oropharyngeal lesions, which are three times more common than in women. However, there is no screening for oropharyngeal cancer.”

So, when should the partner consult? Dr. Mergui advised consulting when there are clinically visible lesions (small warts, bumps, or ear, nose, and throat symptoms). “I do not recommend systematic examination of male or female partners,” he added.
 

Clearing the Virus

There are treatments for cervical lesions but not for papillomavirus infection.

“The only thing that can be suggested is quitting smoking, which increases viral clearance, thus reducing viral load. Also, the use of condoms helps improve viral clearance, but when women have a stable relationship, it seems unrealistic to think they will constantly use condoms. Finally, the prophylactic vaccine has been proposed, but it does not treat the infection. In fact, the real solution is to tell patients that they need to continue regular monitoring,” said Dr. Mergui.

“It should be noted that an ongoing study at the European level seems to show that when women who have undergone surgical treatment for a high-grade cervical lesion are vaccinated at the time of treatment or just after treatment, it reduces the risk of recurrence by 50%. So, the risk of recurrence is around 7%-8%. This strategy could be interesting, but for now, there is no official recommendation,” Dr. Mergui concluded.
 

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

Faced with a positive human papillomavirus (HPV) test, patients are quickly overwhelmed by anxiety-inducing questions. It is crucial to provide them with adequate responses to reassure them, emphasized Jean-Louis Mergui, MD, president of the International Federation for Colposcopy, during the press conference of the Congress of the French Society of Colposcopy and Cervico-Vaginal Pathology.

“Do I have cancer? When did I catch this papillomavirus? Is it dangerous for my partner? How do I get rid of it?” “Not everyone is equipped to answer these four questions. However, it is extremely important that healthcare professionals provide correct answers to patients so that they stop worrying,” Dr. Mergui explained.
 

Papillomavirus and Cancer

One of the first instincts of patients who receive a positive HPV test is to turn to the Internet. There, they read about “high-risk HPV, which is potentially oncogenic,” and become completely panicked, said Dr. Mergui.

However, among women, the probability of having a high-grade CIN3 lesion or higher on the cervix when the HPV test is positive is about 7%, according to the ATHENA study. “About 93% of patients do not have a severe lesion on the cervix. That’s why colposcopy is not performed on all patients. They need to be reassured,” said Dr. Mergui. When the papillomavirus persists, there is a risk for a cervical lesion. After 11 years, between 20% and 30% of patients develop a high-grade lesion on the cervix. However, on average, a high-risk HPV is spontaneously eliminated within 1-2 years. “After 14 months, 50% of women will test negative for their papillomavirus,” Dr. Mergui noted.

“High-risk HPV does not mean there is a lesion; it means there is a risk of developing a lesion on the cervix one day. That’s why these patients need to be monitored and explored,” he added.

In practice, when a patient aged between 30 and 65 years has a positive HPV test, cytology is performed to look for lesions. Only in the case of an abnormal smear, ASC-US, is colposcopy recommended. In the absence of a lesion, a control HPV test is conducted 1 year later to monitor virus persistence.

It should be noted that patients who have been treated for a cervical lesion have a five times higher risk of developing invasive cervical, vaginal, or vulvar cancer. Therefore, treated patients must be monitored once every 3 years for life.
 

Time of Infection

Many patients ask, “When did I catch this papillomavirus?” In response, Dr. Mergui first emphasized that HPV infection is common. “Between ages 15 and 30 years, most of us are infected with a high-risk HPV. When we look at the incidence between ages 15 and 25 years, every year, 20% of all young girls are infected with HPV, including 17% with high-risk HPV. The virus is usually caught within the first 5 years of sexual activity, and typically disappears after about a year,” he explained.

However, the most disturbing scenario for patients is when their last examination was negative, and there is no apparent reason for having caught the virus since then. Suspicion often falls on the partner. Once again, the gynecologist seeks to reassure.

It is possible that the last time screening was conducted, the virus was not sought (HPV test), but rather cervical lesions were sought by smear. However, a normal smear does not mean that the papillomavirus is not present. A negative cytology does not mean a negative HPV test. As we have seen, the virus is not always associated with the presence of a lesion, explained Dr. Mergui.

Also, having had a negative HPV test a few years earlier does not mean that one was not already infected. The HPV test determines the quantity of virus. Therefore, it is possible that the virus was present in small quantities that were without clinical significance (hence, a negative test). However, a few years later, the virus may have multiplied, and the HPV test became positive.

“Sometimes, the virus re-emerges 40, 50 years after infection due to age-related immune decline,” said Dr. Mergui. “So, just because the smear was negative or the HPV test was negative at the last examination does not mean that one was infected between the two.” Moreover, only 15% of couples have the same virus present on the penis or vagina, he pointed out.
 

 

 

Protecting One’s Partner

Once the diagnosis is made, it is often too late to protect the partner because they have already been infected. “It is certain that the partner will be infected or has already been infected because when the patient comes to you with a positive HPV test, she has already had sexual intercourse. It is worth noting that the virus can be transmitted through digital touching, and condoms are not very effective in preventing virus transmission,” said Dr. Mergui.

The speaker further clarified that the risk for men is much lower than that for women. “In women, about 40,000 lesions linked to high-risk HPV types, precancerous or cancerous, are observed every year. In men, this number is 1900. So, this represents 20 times fewer neoplastic lesions in men. The problem in men is oropharyngeal lesions, which are three times more common than in women. However, there is no screening for oropharyngeal cancer.”

So, when should the partner consult? Dr. Mergui advised consulting when there are clinically visible lesions (small warts, bumps, or ear, nose, and throat symptoms). “I do not recommend systematic examination of male or female partners,” he added.
 

Clearing the Virus

There are treatments for cervical lesions but not for papillomavirus infection.

“The only thing that can be suggested is quitting smoking, which increases viral clearance, thus reducing viral load. Also, the use of condoms helps improve viral clearance, but when women have a stable relationship, it seems unrealistic to think they will constantly use condoms. Finally, the prophylactic vaccine has been proposed, but it does not treat the infection. In fact, the real solution is to tell patients that they need to continue regular monitoring,” said Dr. Mergui.

“It should be noted that an ongoing study at the European level seems to show that when women who have undergone surgical treatment for a high-grade cervical lesion are vaccinated at the time of treatment or just after treatment, it reduces the risk of recurrence by 50%. So, the risk of recurrence is around 7%-8%. This strategy could be interesting, but for now, there is no official recommendation,” Dr. Mergui concluded.
 

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition. A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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HPV Vaccine Shown to Be Highly Effective in Girls Years Later

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Changed
Tue, 01/30/2024 - 11:46

 

TOPLINE:

The vaccine Cervarix was effective in protecting women from cervical cancer when administered between ages 12 and 13 years, according to a new study published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide.
  • Programs to provide Cervarix, a bivalent vaccine, began in the United Kingdom in 2007.
  • After the initiation of the programs, administering the vaccine became part of routine care for girls starting at age 12 years.
  • Researchers collected data in 2020 from 447,845 women born between 1988 and 1996 from the Scottish cervical cancer screening system to assess the efficacy of Cervarix in lowering rates of cervical cancer.
  • They correlated the rate of cervical cancer per 100,000 person-years with data on women regarding vaccination status, age when vaccinated, and deprivation in areas like income, housing, and health.

TAKEAWAY:

  • No cases of cervical cancer were found among women who were immunized at ages 12 or 13 years, no matter how many doses they received. 
  • Women who were immunized between ages 14 and 18 years and received three doses had fewer instances of cervical cancer compared with unvaccinated women regardless of deprivation status (3.2 cases per 100,00 women vs 8.4 cases per 100,000). 

IN PRACTICE:

“Continued participation in screening and monitoring of outcomes is required, however, to assess the effects of changes in vaccines used and dosage schedules since the start of vaccination in Scotland in 2008 and the longevity of protection the vaccines offer.”

SOURCE:

The study was led by Timothy J. Palmer, PhD, Scottish Clinical Lead for Cervical Screening at Public Health Scotland.

LIMITATIONS:

Only 14,645 women had received just one or two doses, which may have affected the statistical analysis. 

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by Public Health Scotland. A coauthor reports attending an advisory board meeting for HOLOGIC and Vaccitech. Her institution received research funding or gratis support funding from Cepheid, Euroimmun, GeneFirst, SelfScreen, Hiantis, Seegene, Roche, Hologic, and Vaccitech in the past 3 years.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

The vaccine Cervarix was effective in protecting women from cervical cancer when administered between ages 12 and 13 years, according to a new study published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide.
  • Programs to provide Cervarix, a bivalent vaccine, began in the United Kingdom in 2007.
  • After the initiation of the programs, administering the vaccine became part of routine care for girls starting at age 12 years.
  • Researchers collected data in 2020 from 447,845 women born between 1988 and 1996 from the Scottish cervical cancer screening system to assess the efficacy of Cervarix in lowering rates of cervical cancer.
  • They correlated the rate of cervical cancer per 100,000 person-years with data on women regarding vaccination status, age when vaccinated, and deprivation in areas like income, housing, and health.

TAKEAWAY:

  • No cases of cervical cancer were found among women who were immunized at ages 12 or 13 years, no matter how many doses they received. 
  • Women who were immunized between ages 14 and 18 years and received three doses had fewer instances of cervical cancer compared with unvaccinated women regardless of deprivation status (3.2 cases per 100,00 women vs 8.4 cases per 100,000). 

IN PRACTICE:

“Continued participation in screening and monitoring of outcomes is required, however, to assess the effects of changes in vaccines used and dosage schedules since the start of vaccination in Scotland in 2008 and the longevity of protection the vaccines offer.”

SOURCE:

The study was led by Timothy J. Palmer, PhD, Scottish Clinical Lead for Cervical Screening at Public Health Scotland.

LIMITATIONS:

Only 14,645 women had received just one or two doses, which may have affected the statistical analysis. 

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by Public Health Scotland. A coauthor reports attending an advisory board meeting for HOLOGIC and Vaccitech. Her institution received research funding or gratis support funding from Cepheid, Euroimmun, GeneFirst, SelfScreen, Hiantis, Seegene, Roche, Hologic, and Vaccitech in the past 3 years.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

The vaccine Cervarix was effective in protecting women from cervical cancer when administered between ages 12 and 13 years, according to a new study published in Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Cervical cancer is the fourth most common cancer among women worldwide.
  • Programs to provide Cervarix, a bivalent vaccine, began in the United Kingdom in 2007.
  • After the initiation of the programs, administering the vaccine became part of routine care for girls starting at age 12 years.
  • Researchers collected data in 2020 from 447,845 women born between 1988 and 1996 from the Scottish cervical cancer screening system to assess the efficacy of Cervarix in lowering rates of cervical cancer.
  • They correlated the rate of cervical cancer per 100,000 person-years with data on women regarding vaccination status, age when vaccinated, and deprivation in areas like income, housing, and health.

TAKEAWAY:

  • No cases of cervical cancer were found among women who were immunized at ages 12 or 13 years, no matter how many doses they received. 
  • Women who were immunized between ages 14 and 18 years and received three doses had fewer instances of cervical cancer compared with unvaccinated women regardless of deprivation status (3.2 cases per 100,00 women vs 8.4 cases per 100,000). 

IN PRACTICE:

“Continued participation in screening and monitoring of outcomes is required, however, to assess the effects of changes in vaccines used and dosage schedules since the start of vaccination in Scotland in 2008 and the longevity of protection the vaccines offer.”

SOURCE:

The study was led by Timothy J. Palmer, PhD, Scottish Clinical Lead for Cervical Screening at Public Health Scotland.

LIMITATIONS:

Only 14,645 women had received just one or two doses, which may have affected the statistical analysis. 

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by Public Health Scotland. A coauthor reports attending an advisory board meeting for HOLOGIC and Vaccitech. Her institution received research funding or gratis support funding from Cepheid, Euroimmun, GeneFirst, SelfScreen, Hiantis, Seegene, Roche, Hologic, and Vaccitech in the past 3 years.
 

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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HPV Vax Tied to Lower Odds of Cervical Lesion Progression

Article Type
Changed
Tue, 01/16/2024 - 17:18

 

TOPLINE:

Among women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 (CIN2), vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) before age 20 is associated with lower odds of progression.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from 7904 women in Denmark who were undergoing active surveillance for CIN2 between 2007 and 2020.
  • CIN2 lesions  on their own. Removing them can increase the risk for  during subsequent pregnancies, the researchers noted.
  • Nearly half of the women had received at least one dose of an HPV vaccine at least 1 year before the diagnosis of cervical dysplasia.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During 28 months of follow-up, the risk for progression was 22.9% for women vaccinated before age 15, 31.5% for women vaccinated between ages 15 and 20, and 37.6% for women who were not vaccinated.
  • Women vaccinated before age 15 had a 35% lower risk for progression than unvaccinated women, after adjusting for cytology, income, and education (adjusted relative risk, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.57-0.75).
  • Cervical cancer developed in 0.37% of the unvaccinated women and 0.13% of the vaccinated women.
  • All cases of cervical cancer in the vaccinated group occurred in women who received the vaccine after age 20.

IN PRACTICE:

“These findings suggest that HPV vaccination status may be used to identify women at higher risk for progression, thereby enabling risk stratification at the time of CIN2 diagnosis,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

Louise Krog, BscMed, with Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark, was the corresponding author of the study. The research was published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study authors had limited information about potential confounders such as smoking, immunosuppressive conditions, and the age at which patients became sexually active.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Danish Cancer Society, the Carpenter Axel Kastrup-Nielsen’s Memorial Fund, and the Dagmar Marshall’s Fund. Co-authors disclosed ties to AstraZeneca, Roche, and Hologic.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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TOPLINE:

Among women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 (CIN2), vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) before age 20 is associated with lower odds of progression.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from 7904 women in Denmark who were undergoing active surveillance for CIN2 between 2007 and 2020.
  • CIN2 lesions  on their own. Removing them can increase the risk for  during subsequent pregnancies, the researchers noted.
  • Nearly half of the women had received at least one dose of an HPV vaccine at least 1 year before the diagnosis of cervical dysplasia.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During 28 months of follow-up, the risk for progression was 22.9% for women vaccinated before age 15, 31.5% for women vaccinated between ages 15 and 20, and 37.6% for women who were not vaccinated.
  • Women vaccinated before age 15 had a 35% lower risk for progression than unvaccinated women, after adjusting for cytology, income, and education (adjusted relative risk, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.57-0.75).
  • Cervical cancer developed in 0.37% of the unvaccinated women and 0.13% of the vaccinated women.
  • All cases of cervical cancer in the vaccinated group occurred in women who received the vaccine after age 20.

IN PRACTICE:

“These findings suggest that HPV vaccination status may be used to identify women at higher risk for progression, thereby enabling risk stratification at the time of CIN2 diagnosis,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

Louise Krog, BscMed, with Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark, was the corresponding author of the study. The research was published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study authors had limited information about potential confounders such as smoking, immunosuppressive conditions, and the age at which patients became sexually active.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Danish Cancer Society, the Carpenter Axel Kastrup-Nielsen’s Memorial Fund, and the Dagmar Marshall’s Fund. Co-authors disclosed ties to AstraZeneca, Roche, and Hologic.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

 

TOPLINE:

Among women with cervical intraepithelial neoplasia grade 2 (CIN2), vaccination against human papillomavirus (HPV) before age 20 is associated with lower odds of progression.

METHODOLOGY:

  • Researchers analyzed data from 7904 women in Denmark who were undergoing active surveillance for CIN2 between 2007 and 2020.
  • CIN2 lesions  on their own. Removing them can increase the risk for  during subsequent pregnancies, the researchers noted.
  • Nearly half of the women had received at least one dose of an HPV vaccine at least 1 year before the diagnosis of cervical dysplasia.

TAKEAWAY:

  • During 28 months of follow-up, the risk for progression was 22.9% for women vaccinated before age 15, 31.5% for women vaccinated between ages 15 and 20, and 37.6% for women who were not vaccinated.
  • Women vaccinated before age 15 had a 35% lower risk for progression than unvaccinated women, after adjusting for cytology, income, and education (adjusted relative risk, 0.65; 95% CI, 0.57-0.75).
  • Cervical cancer developed in 0.37% of the unvaccinated women and 0.13% of the vaccinated women.
  • All cases of cervical cancer in the vaccinated group occurred in women who received the vaccine after age 20.

IN PRACTICE:

“These findings suggest that HPV vaccination status may be used to identify women at higher risk for progression, thereby enabling risk stratification at the time of CIN2 diagnosis,” the researchers wrote.

SOURCE:

Louise Krog, BscMed, with Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark, was the corresponding author of the study. The research was published online in the American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology.

LIMITATIONS:

The study authors had limited information about potential confounders such as smoking, immunosuppressive conditions, and the age at which patients became sexually active.

DISCLOSURES:

The study was funded by the Danish Cancer Society, the Carpenter Axel Kastrup-Nielsen’s Memorial Fund, and the Dagmar Marshall’s Fund. Co-authors disclosed ties to AstraZeneca, Roche, and Hologic.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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Improving the Treatment of Sexual Dysfunction in Women

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Tue, 01/02/2024 - 15:35

How can we improve the detection, assessment, and treatment of female sexual dysfunction?

Charlotte Methorst, MD, a urologist from Paris, and Carol Burté, MD, a sexologist and andrologist from Nice, dealt with these themes during a session at the French Urology Association’s 2023 conference, emphasizing the need for doctors to be involved in female sexual health.

“There’s currently a real disconnect; doctors talk very little about sexual health, yet it’s a topic that patients would really like to talk about. And this is even truer for women,” said Dr. Methorst.

“We need to spot sexual dysfunction because the topic is rarely broached spontaneously by female patients (19%) and even less so by healthcare workers (9%). Nowadays, it’s a very common problem (40%). Sexual dysfunction affects quality of life and a couple’s relationship. It also can reveal other conditions,” added Dr. Burté.
 

Spot and Assess

In terms of detecting the condition, the reference tool is the self-assessed Female Sexual Function Index, which comprises 19 questions covering six areas of sexual dysfunction: Desire, subjective arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction, and pain or discomfort.

But it is also possible to use the Sexual Complaints Screener for Women that evaluates sexual health over the past 6 months, explains Dr. Burté. For example, the patient is asked if she has had a lack of or low interest in sex or sexual desire in the past 6 months and if this has been a problem. She is also asked if she has experienced any pain during or after sexual activity.

To understand the root cause of sexual dysfunction, clinicians need to investigate the patient’s sexual health and perform a medical assessment. It’s also essential to ask the patient about her previous sexual, medical, and psychological history and to evaluate the couple and contributory factors, such as stress, fatigue, etc. This approach is known as the biopsychosocial model.

Once the contributory factors have been determined, relevant information can be given to the patient about her specific sexual problem, and the most suitable therapeutic approaches can be discussed with her.
 

Which Treatment Pathway?

Some problems may be improved with simple advice and lifestyle changes, but sex therapy and medication are options in other cases, explained the two doctors. “Since the causes of sexual dysfunction in women are mostly multifactorial, an integrative approach is needed,” said Dr. Burté.

The two main types of therapy that might be proposed for sexual dysfunction are sex therapies with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and certain medicines being used as first-line treatment.

Using CBT in sexology requires patients and therapists to look past prejudices, preconceived ideas, and dysfunctional patterns and learn new behavioral, cognitive, and attentional strategies in terms of sexual health, regardless of whether an individual or couple is being treated.
 

Which Medicines?

Vasoactive drugs such as phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors and prostaglandin have produced disappointing results. Drugs that act on the central nervous system to stimulate sexual desire, such as bremelanotide and flibanserin, don’t have marketing authorization in France due to their “insufficient” risk-benefit ratio.

However, topical hormone treatments (such as estrogen and dehydroepiandrosterone) are often used, particularly for cases of recurrent cystitis, in postmenopausal women and to treat urinary incontinence. “These topical treatments are very effective and can really change the life of a woman who no longer has a sex life because she is in discomfort and simply has dryness of the vulva and vagina,” said Dr. Burté, who recommends prescribing creams, which are better tolerated than pessaries.

General hormone treatments, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and tibolone are prescribed to postmenopausal women.

Another option not yet authorized in France is testosterone because sexual desire depends on this hormone. An international consensus (2019, 10 learned societies) and recommendations made by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health advise treatment with testosterone in the postmenopausal period, with or without HRT. The dose prescribed is a 10th of the male dose administered subcutaneously (300 µ/d) once a woman›s blood testosterone level has been determined to make sure there is an actual deficiency and to restore her testosterone to near premenopausal levels.

Both doctors indicated that having the chance to work with other doctors as part of a network is essential, especially with a sexual health specialist, if necessary.

Dr. Burté reported no conflicts of interest regarding the content of this article. Dr. Methorst reported relationships with several pharmaceutical laboratories.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition.

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How can we improve the detection, assessment, and treatment of female sexual dysfunction?

Charlotte Methorst, MD, a urologist from Paris, and Carol Burté, MD, a sexologist and andrologist from Nice, dealt with these themes during a session at the French Urology Association’s 2023 conference, emphasizing the need for doctors to be involved in female sexual health.

“There’s currently a real disconnect; doctors talk very little about sexual health, yet it’s a topic that patients would really like to talk about. And this is even truer for women,” said Dr. Methorst.

“We need to spot sexual dysfunction because the topic is rarely broached spontaneously by female patients (19%) and even less so by healthcare workers (9%). Nowadays, it’s a very common problem (40%). Sexual dysfunction affects quality of life and a couple’s relationship. It also can reveal other conditions,” added Dr. Burté.
 

Spot and Assess

In terms of detecting the condition, the reference tool is the self-assessed Female Sexual Function Index, which comprises 19 questions covering six areas of sexual dysfunction: Desire, subjective arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction, and pain or discomfort.

But it is also possible to use the Sexual Complaints Screener for Women that evaluates sexual health over the past 6 months, explains Dr. Burté. For example, the patient is asked if she has had a lack of or low interest in sex or sexual desire in the past 6 months and if this has been a problem. She is also asked if she has experienced any pain during or after sexual activity.

To understand the root cause of sexual dysfunction, clinicians need to investigate the patient’s sexual health and perform a medical assessment. It’s also essential to ask the patient about her previous sexual, medical, and psychological history and to evaluate the couple and contributory factors, such as stress, fatigue, etc. This approach is known as the biopsychosocial model.

Once the contributory factors have been determined, relevant information can be given to the patient about her specific sexual problem, and the most suitable therapeutic approaches can be discussed with her.
 

Which Treatment Pathway?

Some problems may be improved with simple advice and lifestyle changes, but sex therapy and medication are options in other cases, explained the two doctors. “Since the causes of sexual dysfunction in women are mostly multifactorial, an integrative approach is needed,” said Dr. Burté.

The two main types of therapy that might be proposed for sexual dysfunction are sex therapies with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and certain medicines being used as first-line treatment.

Using CBT in sexology requires patients and therapists to look past prejudices, preconceived ideas, and dysfunctional patterns and learn new behavioral, cognitive, and attentional strategies in terms of sexual health, regardless of whether an individual or couple is being treated.
 

Which Medicines?

Vasoactive drugs such as phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors and prostaglandin have produced disappointing results. Drugs that act on the central nervous system to stimulate sexual desire, such as bremelanotide and flibanserin, don’t have marketing authorization in France due to their “insufficient” risk-benefit ratio.

However, topical hormone treatments (such as estrogen and dehydroepiandrosterone) are often used, particularly for cases of recurrent cystitis, in postmenopausal women and to treat urinary incontinence. “These topical treatments are very effective and can really change the life of a woman who no longer has a sex life because she is in discomfort and simply has dryness of the vulva and vagina,” said Dr. Burté, who recommends prescribing creams, which are better tolerated than pessaries.

General hormone treatments, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and tibolone are prescribed to postmenopausal women.

Another option not yet authorized in France is testosterone because sexual desire depends on this hormone. An international consensus (2019, 10 learned societies) and recommendations made by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health advise treatment with testosterone in the postmenopausal period, with or without HRT. The dose prescribed is a 10th of the male dose administered subcutaneously (300 µ/d) once a woman›s blood testosterone level has been determined to make sure there is an actual deficiency and to restore her testosterone to near premenopausal levels.

Both doctors indicated that having the chance to work with other doctors as part of a network is essential, especially with a sexual health specialist, if necessary.

Dr. Burté reported no conflicts of interest regarding the content of this article. Dr. Methorst reported relationships with several pharmaceutical laboratories.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition.

How can we improve the detection, assessment, and treatment of female sexual dysfunction?

Charlotte Methorst, MD, a urologist from Paris, and Carol Burté, MD, a sexologist and andrologist from Nice, dealt with these themes during a session at the French Urology Association’s 2023 conference, emphasizing the need for doctors to be involved in female sexual health.

“There’s currently a real disconnect; doctors talk very little about sexual health, yet it’s a topic that patients would really like to talk about. And this is even truer for women,” said Dr. Methorst.

“We need to spot sexual dysfunction because the topic is rarely broached spontaneously by female patients (19%) and even less so by healthcare workers (9%). Nowadays, it’s a very common problem (40%). Sexual dysfunction affects quality of life and a couple’s relationship. It also can reveal other conditions,” added Dr. Burté.
 

Spot and Assess

In terms of detecting the condition, the reference tool is the self-assessed Female Sexual Function Index, which comprises 19 questions covering six areas of sexual dysfunction: Desire, subjective arousal, lubrication, orgasm, satisfaction, and pain or discomfort.

But it is also possible to use the Sexual Complaints Screener for Women that evaluates sexual health over the past 6 months, explains Dr. Burté. For example, the patient is asked if she has had a lack of or low interest in sex or sexual desire in the past 6 months and if this has been a problem. She is also asked if she has experienced any pain during or after sexual activity.

To understand the root cause of sexual dysfunction, clinicians need to investigate the patient’s sexual health and perform a medical assessment. It’s also essential to ask the patient about her previous sexual, medical, and psychological history and to evaluate the couple and contributory factors, such as stress, fatigue, etc. This approach is known as the biopsychosocial model.

Once the contributory factors have been determined, relevant information can be given to the patient about her specific sexual problem, and the most suitable therapeutic approaches can be discussed with her.
 

Which Treatment Pathway?

Some problems may be improved with simple advice and lifestyle changes, but sex therapy and medication are options in other cases, explained the two doctors. “Since the causes of sexual dysfunction in women are mostly multifactorial, an integrative approach is needed,” said Dr. Burté.

The two main types of therapy that might be proposed for sexual dysfunction are sex therapies with cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) and certain medicines being used as first-line treatment.

Using CBT in sexology requires patients and therapists to look past prejudices, preconceived ideas, and dysfunctional patterns and learn new behavioral, cognitive, and attentional strategies in terms of sexual health, regardless of whether an individual or couple is being treated.
 

Which Medicines?

Vasoactive drugs such as phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors and prostaglandin have produced disappointing results. Drugs that act on the central nervous system to stimulate sexual desire, such as bremelanotide and flibanserin, don’t have marketing authorization in France due to their “insufficient” risk-benefit ratio.

However, topical hormone treatments (such as estrogen and dehydroepiandrosterone) are often used, particularly for cases of recurrent cystitis, in postmenopausal women and to treat urinary incontinence. “These topical treatments are very effective and can really change the life of a woman who no longer has a sex life because she is in discomfort and simply has dryness of the vulva and vagina,” said Dr. Burté, who recommends prescribing creams, which are better tolerated than pessaries.

General hormone treatments, hormone replacement therapy (HRT), and tibolone are prescribed to postmenopausal women.

Another option not yet authorized in France is testosterone because sexual desire depends on this hormone. An international consensus (2019, 10 learned societies) and recommendations made by the International Society for the Study of Women’s Sexual Health advise treatment with testosterone in the postmenopausal period, with or without HRT. The dose prescribed is a 10th of the male dose administered subcutaneously (300 µ/d) once a woman›s blood testosterone level has been determined to make sure there is an actual deficiency and to restore her testosterone to near premenopausal levels.

Both doctors indicated that having the chance to work with other doctors as part of a network is essential, especially with a sexual health specialist, if necessary.

Dr. Burté reported no conflicts of interest regarding the content of this article. Dr. Methorst reported relationships with several pharmaceutical laboratories.

This article was translated from the Medscape French edition.

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Cluster of Eye Syphilis Cases Prompts CDC Concern

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Tue, 12/19/2023 - 12:07

A cluster of ocular presentation of syphilis has experts questioning whether this rare finding suggests the bacterium has mutated, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With the incidence of syphilis infection in women increasing in the United States, experts are asking clinicians to be on the lookout for unusual ocular presentations. 

“This is the first time such a cluster has been reported in the US,” the International Society for Infectious Diseases posted on ProMED

Five women in Southwest Michigan who had a common male sex partner developed syphilis infections in their eyes. No new cases have been found related to these five cases after the women and the man received medical care. 

If left untreated, the bacterium, Treponema pallidum, can infect the eyes, the ears, and the central nervous system.

The women, identified as non-Hispanic White, were aged 40-60 years and were not infected with HIV. They were diagnosed with early-stage syphilis and all were hospitalized and treated with intravenous penicillin. Routes of sexual exposure among the women included anal (40%), oral (40%), and vaginal (100%), the report states.

The common male sex partner they all met online was found to have early latent syphilis but never developed ocular syphilis. 

It is not the eyes that are being exposed. Rather, it is an ocular presentation brought about by a systemic infection carried through the bloodstream after sexual exposure, explains William Nettleton, MD, MPH, medical director of the Kalamazoo and Calhoun public health departments in Michigan and lead author of the report.

“If we screen, identify, and treat syphilis promptly, we can prevent systemic manifestations,” he says. 

Clinicians should be aware that the ocular manifestations can come at different stages of syphilis. “For patients you think may have ocular syphilis,” Dr. Nettleton says, “an immediate ophthalmologic evaluation is indicated.” 

Symptoms Differed

The five women presented with a variety of symptoms. 

Multiple attempts to contact the male partner by telephone and text were made by Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, but he did not respond. Local public health physicians reviewed the man’s electronic health record and discovered that he had sought care at a hospital emergency department in January 2022 for ulcerative penile and anal lesions. 

He reported having multiple female sex partners during the previous 12 months but declined to disclose their identities; he reported no male or transgender sexual contact, according to the CDC report. Eventually he agreed to an evaluation, was found to have early latent syphilis, and was treated with penicillin. 

Cases of syphilis have been soaring in the United States in recent years, reaching a 70-year high.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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A cluster of ocular presentation of syphilis has experts questioning whether this rare finding suggests the bacterium has mutated, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With the incidence of syphilis infection in women increasing in the United States, experts are asking clinicians to be on the lookout for unusual ocular presentations. 

“This is the first time such a cluster has been reported in the US,” the International Society for Infectious Diseases posted on ProMED

Five women in Southwest Michigan who had a common male sex partner developed syphilis infections in their eyes. No new cases have been found related to these five cases after the women and the man received medical care. 

If left untreated, the bacterium, Treponema pallidum, can infect the eyes, the ears, and the central nervous system.

The women, identified as non-Hispanic White, were aged 40-60 years and were not infected with HIV. They were diagnosed with early-stage syphilis and all were hospitalized and treated with intravenous penicillin. Routes of sexual exposure among the women included anal (40%), oral (40%), and vaginal (100%), the report states.

The common male sex partner they all met online was found to have early latent syphilis but never developed ocular syphilis. 

It is not the eyes that are being exposed. Rather, it is an ocular presentation brought about by a systemic infection carried through the bloodstream after sexual exposure, explains William Nettleton, MD, MPH, medical director of the Kalamazoo and Calhoun public health departments in Michigan and lead author of the report.

“If we screen, identify, and treat syphilis promptly, we can prevent systemic manifestations,” he says. 

Clinicians should be aware that the ocular manifestations can come at different stages of syphilis. “For patients you think may have ocular syphilis,” Dr. Nettleton says, “an immediate ophthalmologic evaluation is indicated.” 

Symptoms Differed

The five women presented with a variety of symptoms. 

Multiple attempts to contact the male partner by telephone and text were made by Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, but he did not respond. Local public health physicians reviewed the man’s electronic health record and discovered that he had sought care at a hospital emergency department in January 2022 for ulcerative penile and anal lesions. 

He reported having multiple female sex partners during the previous 12 months but declined to disclose their identities; he reported no male or transgender sexual contact, according to the CDC report. Eventually he agreed to an evaluation, was found to have early latent syphilis, and was treated with penicillin. 

Cases of syphilis have been soaring in the United States in recent years, reaching a 70-year high.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

A cluster of ocular presentation of syphilis has experts questioning whether this rare finding suggests the bacterium has mutated, according to a report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

With the incidence of syphilis infection in women increasing in the United States, experts are asking clinicians to be on the lookout for unusual ocular presentations. 

“This is the first time such a cluster has been reported in the US,” the International Society for Infectious Diseases posted on ProMED

Five women in Southwest Michigan who had a common male sex partner developed syphilis infections in their eyes. No new cases have been found related to these five cases after the women and the man received medical care. 

If left untreated, the bacterium, Treponema pallidum, can infect the eyes, the ears, and the central nervous system.

The women, identified as non-Hispanic White, were aged 40-60 years and were not infected with HIV. They were diagnosed with early-stage syphilis and all were hospitalized and treated with intravenous penicillin. Routes of sexual exposure among the women included anal (40%), oral (40%), and vaginal (100%), the report states.

The common male sex partner they all met online was found to have early latent syphilis but never developed ocular syphilis. 

It is not the eyes that are being exposed. Rather, it is an ocular presentation brought about by a systemic infection carried through the bloodstream after sexual exposure, explains William Nettleton, MD, MPH, medical director of the Kalamazoo and Calhoun public health departments in Michigan and lead author of the report.

“If we screen, identify, and treat syphilis promptly, we can prevent systemic manifestations,” he says. 

Clinicians should be aware that the ocular manifestations can come at different stages of syphilis. “For patients you think may have ocular syphilis,” Dr. Nettleton says, “an immediate ophthalmologic evaluation is indicated.” 

Symptoms Differed

The five women presented with a variety of symptoms. 

Multiple attempts to contact the male partner by telephone and text were made by Michigan Department of Health and Human Services, but he did not respond. Local public health physicians reviewed the man’s electronic health record and discovered that he had sought care at a hospital emergency department in January 2022 for ulcerative penile and anal lesions. 

He reported having multiple female sex partners during the previous 12 months but declined to disclose their identities; he reported no male or transgender sexual contact, according to the CDC report. Eventually he agreed to an evaluation, was found to have early latent syphilis, and was treated with penicillin. 

Cases of syphilis have been soaring in the United States in recent years, reaching a 70-year high.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.

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