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. 2018 Feb;94(1):32-36.
doi: 10.1136/sextrans-2016-053081. Epub 2017 Jun 9.

Contaminated fingers: a potential cause of Chlamydia trachomatis- positive urine specimens

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Contaminated fingers: a potential cause of Chlamydia trachomatis- positive urine specimens

Philip M Giffard et al. Sex Transm Infect. 2018 Feb.

Abstract

Objectives: The detection of an STI agent in a urogenital tract (UGT) specimen from a young child is regarded as being indicative of sexual abuse. However, the probabilities of contamination events that could conceivably lead to STI positive specimens in the absence of sexual contact are unclear. The objective was to estimate the potential for fingers that have come in contact with Chlamydia trachomatis-positive urine to detectably contaminate C. trachomatis-negative urine.

Methods: The study design was based on self-experimentation. Dilutions of C. trachomatis elementary bodies (EBs) were prepared. A participant contacted an EB dilution then a urine surrogate specimen. The experiment was performed by three participants using three C. trachomatis isolates, of genotype E, F and B. Two surrogate urine contact methods were used to mimic contamination of a carer assisting with a child's urine collection. All EB dilutions and urine surrogate specimens were subjected to C. trachomatis assay and quantification in a real-time PCR-based diagnostic system.

Results: The amplimer crossing point (Cq) for EB dilutions was 10.0±1.6 less than for corresponding finger contacted urine specimens, which corresponds to ~10 µL of EB suspension transferred. This was largely independent of participant identity, C. trachomatis strain or EB dilution. Hand decontamination led to large reductions in EBs transferred, but transfer remained consistently detectable. Recent Cq data from C. trachomatis-positive clinical urine specimens were collated, and 20% clearly contained sufficient C. trachomatis to detectably contaminate another specimen by finger-mediated transfer, as in this experiment.

Conclusions: This study directly demonstrated the potential for urine contaminated fingers to convert a C. trachomatis-negative urine specimen to C. trachomatis positive as a result of contact. Accordingly, procedures for urine specimen collection, particularly from children, need to be designed to prevent contamination.

Keywords: children; chlamydia trachomatis; sexual abuse; urine.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: None declared.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Typical result from an EB transfer experiment for one strain, with the solid line representing Cq values from dilutions of an EB suspension and the dotted  line representing the mean Cq from the corresponding finger contacted urine surrogate specimen, for all three participants. EB, elementary body.

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