Practice Alert

2021 CDC guidelines on sexually transmitted infections

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Pelvic inflammatory disease

Recommended regimens for treating pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) have changed (TABLES 3 and 4).1 Women with mild or moderate PID can be treated with intramuscular or oral regimens, as outcomes with these regimens are equivalent to those seen with intravenous treatments. The nonintravenous options all include 3 antibiotics: a cephalosporin, doxycycline, and metronidazole.

Table of recommended parenteral regimens for PID

To minimize disease transmission, instruct women to avoid sex until therapy is complete, their symptoms have resolved, and sex partners have been treated. Sex partners of those with PID in the 60 days prior to the onset of symptoms should be evaluated, tested, and presumptively treated for chlamydia and gonorrhea.

Table of recommended intramuscular or oral regimens for PID

Follow through on public health procedures

STIs are an important set of diseases from a public health perspective. Family physicians have the opportunity to assist with the prevention and control of these infections through screening, making accurate diagnoses, and applying recommended treatments. When you suspect that a patient has an STI, test for the most common ones: gonorrhea, chlamydia, HIV, and syphilis. Report all confirmed diagnoses to the local public health department and be prepared to refer patients’ sexual contacts to the local public health department or to provide contact evaluation and treatment.

Vaccines against STIs include hepatitis B vaccine, human papillomavirus vaccine, and hepatitis A vaccine. Offer these vaccines to all previously unvaccinated adolescents and young adults as per recommendations from the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices.5

Pages

Recommended Reading

HCV screening in pregnancy: Reducing the risk for casualties in the quest for elimination
MDedge Family Medicine
Big drop in U.S. cervical cancer rates, mortality in younger women
MDedge Family Medicine
Does vitamin D benefit only those who are deficient?
MDedge Family Medicine
HPV vaccines reduce cervical cancer rates in young females
MDedge Family Medicine
AHA statement on impact of major life events on physical activity
MDedge Family Medicine
Study shows wider gaps, broader inequities in U.S. sex education than 25 years ago
MDedge Family Medicine
The gender pay gap, care economy, and mental health
MDedge Family Medicine
Specialists think it’s up to the PCP to recommend flu vaccines. But many patients don’t see a PCP every year
MDedge Family Medicine
Intent to vaccinate kids against COVID higher among vaccinated parents
MDedge Family Medicine
Higher resting heart rate tied to increased dementia risk
MDedge Family Medicine