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Dive into the research topics where Marleen Temmerman is active.

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Featured researches published by Marleen Temmerman.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2001

Sexually transmitted infections and vaginal douching in a population of female sex workers in Nairobi, Kenya

Karoline Fonck; Rupert Kaul; F Keli; Job J. Bwayo; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; Stephen Moses; Marleen Temmerman

Objective: To assess the association between vaginal douching and sexually transmitted infections (STI) among a group of female sex workers (FSWs) in Nairobi, Kenya. Methods: This study was part of a randomised, placebo controlled trial of monthly prophylaxis with 1 g of azithromycin to prevent STIs and HIV infection in a cohort of Nairobi FSWs. Consenting women were administered a questionnaire and screened for STIs. Results: The seroprevalence of HIV-1 among 543 FSWs screened was 30%. HIV infection was significantly associated with bacterial vaginosis (BV), trichomoniasis, gonorrhoea, and the presence of a genital ulcer. Regular douching was reported by 72% of the women, of whom the majority inserted fluids in the vagina, generally after each sexual intercourse. Water with soap was the fluid most often used (81%), followed by salty water (18%), water alone (9%), and a commercial antiseptic (5%). Douching in general and douching with soap and water were significantly associated with bacterial vaginosis (p = 0.05 and p = 0.04 respectively). There was a significant trend for increased frequency of douching and higher prevalence of BV. There was no direct relation observed between douching and risk for HIV infection or other STIs. Conclusion: The widespread habit of douching among African female sex workers was confirmed. The association between vaginal douching and BV is of concern, given the increased risk of HIV infection with BV, which has now been shown in several studies. It is unclear why we could not demonstrate a direct association between douching and HIV infection. Further research is required to better understand the complex relation between douching, risk for bacterial vaginosis, and risk for HIV and other STIs.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 1994

Maternal human immunodeficiency virus-1 infection and pregnancy outcome.

Marleen Temmerman; Ephantus N. Chomba; Jo Ndinya-Achola; Francis A. Plummer; Mieke Coppens; Peter Piot

Objective: To study the impact of maternal human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV‐1) infection on pregnancy outcome. Methods: Between January 1989 and December 1991, 406 HIV‐1‐seropositive and 407 HIV‐1‐seronegative age‐ and parity‐matched pregnant women from Nairobi, Kenya, all at less than 28 weeks gestation, were recruited into a prospective study of HIV‐1 infection in pregnant women and their offspring. Both groups were followed until 6 weeks postpartum. Results: Three hundred fifteen HIV‐1‐seropositive women and 311 HIV‐1‐seronegative controls were followed until delivery. Seropositive women were younger at sexual debut and reported more lifetime partners and more sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) than the seronegative controls. The seropositive women had higher rates of genital ulcer disease (4.7 versus 2.0%; P = .08), genital warts (4.9 versus 2.0%; P = .03), and positive syphilis serology (7.9 versus 3.2%; P < .001), but there were no differences between the groups in isolation rates of Neisseria gonorrhoeae (6.8 versus 7.1%) and Chlamydia trachomatis (11.5 versus 9.0%). Maternal HIV‐1 infection was associated with significantly lower birth weight (2913 versus 3072 g; P = .0003) and with prematurity (21.1 versus 9.4%; P < .0001), but not with small for gestational age size (4.2 versus 3.2%; P = .7). The stillbirth rate was higher in seropositive women, yet not statistically significant (3.8 versus 1.9%; P = .2). Women with a CD4 count lower than 30% had a higher risk of preterm delivery (26.3 versus 10.1%; P < .001). Postpartum endometritis was more common in HIV‐1‐infected women than in seronegative controls (10.3 versus 4.2%; P = .01) and was inversely correlated with the CD4 percentage. No histopathologic placental abnormalities attributable to HIV‐1 were detected. Conclusion: Maternal HIV‐1 infection was significantly associated with prematurity and postpartum endometritis, but not with fetal growth retardation. There was a trend toward a higher stillbirth rate in HIV‐1‐seropositive mothers. (Obstet Gynecol 1994;83:495‐501)


The Journal of Infectious Diseases | 2007

Prevalent Herpes Simplex Virus Type 2 Infection is Associated with Altered Vaginal Flora and an increased Susceptibility to Multiple Sexually Transmitted Infections

Rupert Kaul; Nico Nagelkerke; Joshua Kimani; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; Job J. Bwayo; Kelly S. MacDonald; Anu Rebbaprgada; Karolien Fonck; Marleen Temmerman; Allan R. Ronald; Stephen Moses

BACKGROUNDnPrevalent herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) infection increases human immunodeficiency virus acquisition. We hypothesized that HSV-2 infection might also predispose individuals to acquire other common sexually transmitted infections (STIs).nnnMETHODSnWe studied the association between prevalent HSV-2 infection and STI incidence in a prospective, randomized trial of periodic STI therapy among Kenyan female sex workers. Participants were screened monthly for infection with Neisseria gonorrhoeae and Chlamydia trachomatis, and at least every 6 months for bacterial vaginosis (BV) and infection with Treponema pallidum, Trichomonas vaginalis, and/or HSV-2.nnnRESULTSnIncreased prevalence of HSV-2 infection and increased prevalence of BV were each associated with the other; the direction of causality could not be determined. After stratifying for sexual risk-taking, BV status, and antibiotic use, prevalent HSV-2 infection remained associated with an increased incidence of infection with N. gonorrhoeae (incidence rate ratio [IRR], 4.3 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 1.5-12.2]), T. vaginalis (IRR, 2.3 [95% CI, 1.3-4.2]), and syphilis (IRR, 4.7 [95% CI, 1.1-19.9]). BV was associated with increased rates of infection with C. trachomatis (IRR, 2.1 [95% CI, 1.1-3.8]) and T. vaginalis (IRR, 8.0 [95% CI, 3.2-19.8]). CONCLUSION; Increased prevalences of HSV-2 infection and BV were associated with each other and also associated with enhanced susceptibility to an overlapping spectrum of other STIs. Demonstration of causality will require clinical trials that suppress HSV-2 infection, BV, or both.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2000

Effect of a syphilis control programme on pregnancy outcome in Nairobi Kenya.

Marleen Temmerman; Peter Gichangi; Karoline Fonck; Ludwig Apers; Patricia Claeys; L Van Renterghem; G Karanja; Jo Ndinya-Achola; Job J. Bwayo

Objectives: To assess the impact of a syphilis control programme of pregnant women on pregnancy outcome in Kenya. Method: Women who came to deliver to Pumwani Maternity Hospital (PMH) between April 1997 and March 1998 were tested for syphilis. Reactive rapid plasma reagin (RPR) tests were titrated and confirmed with treponema haemagglutination test (TPHA). Equal numbers of RPR and TPHA negative women were enrolled. Antenatal syphilis screening and treatment history were examined from the antenatal cards. Results: Of 22 466 women giving birth, 12 414 (55%) were tested for syphilis. Out of these, 377 (3%) were RPR reactive of whom 296 were confirmed by TPHA. Syphilis seroreactive women had a more risky sexual behaviour and coexistent HIV antibody positivity; 26% were HIV seropositive compared with 11% among syphilis negative mothers. The incidence of adverse obstetric outcome defined as low birth weight and stillbirth, was 9.5%. Syphilis seropositive women had a higher risk for adverse obstetric outcome (OR 4.1, 95% CI 2.4–7.2). Antenatal treatment of RPR reactive women significantly improved pregnancy outcome but the risk of adverse outcome remained 2.5-fold higher than the risk observed in uninfected mothers. Conclusions: These data confirm the adverse effect of syphilis on pregnancy outcome. This study also shows the efficacy of antenatal testing and prompt treatment of RPR reactive mothers on pregnancy outcome.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 1995

Syphilis control in pregnancy: decentralization of screening facilities to primary care level, a demonstration project in Nairobi, Kenya

F. Jenniskens; E. Obwaka; S. Kirisuah; S. Moses; F. Mohamedali Yusufali; J.O. Ndinya Achola; Lieve Fransen; Mathias Laga; Marleen Temmerman

A decentralized syphilis control program in pregnant women was implementd in nine Nairobi City Council antenatal clinics between July 1992 and August 1993, whereby pregnant women were screened for syphilis, treated before leaving the clinic if RPR seroreactive, and counselled on the importance of partner treatment and sexual abstinence during treatment in order to protect their unborn babies from getting congenital syphilis. A total of 13 131 pregnant women were screened for syphilis (RPR test), 87.3% of seroreactive women were treated on site and 50% of partners returned to the clinic and were treated. The prevalence of RPR reactivity was 6.5%. Based on other data the program could theoretically have prevented 413 cases of congenital syphilis at a cost of approximately 50 USD per prevented case. This demonstration project shows that decentralized prevention of congenital syphilis in antenatal clinics by nurses is feasible and inexpensive and should receive priority in resource allocation in reproductive health and child survival programs.


Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes | 2002

Reduced HIV risk-taking and low HIV incidence after enrollment and risk-reduction counseling in a sexually transmitted disease prevention trial in Nairobi, Kenya

Rupert Kaul; Joshua Kimani; Nico Nagelkerke; Karoline Fonck; F Keli; Kelly S. MacDonald; Allan R. Ronald; Francis A. Plummer; Job J. Bwayo; Elizabeth N. Ngugi; Marleen Temmerman; Stephen Moses

There is an urgent need in sub-Saharan Africa to develop more effective methods of HIV prevention, including improved strategies of sexually transmitted infection (STI) prevention or an HIV vaccine. The efficacy of these strategies may be tested through clinical trials within cohorts at high risk for STI and HIV, such as female commercial sex workers. For ethical reasons, standard HIV prevention services, including access to free condoms, risk-reduction counseling, and STI therapy, will generally be offered to all study subjects. Because study subjects would often not otherwise have access to these prevention services, it is possible that enrollment in such clinical trials will itself reduce incidence rates of STI and HIV below expected levels, reducing the power to test the efficacy of the randomized intervention. We show that the provision of standard HIV prevention services as part of a randomized STI/HIV prevention trial is temporally associated with a dramatic reduction in sexual risk-taking, and that this reduction is directly associated with reduced STI incidence. This finding should be considered in the design of clinical trials with an endpoint of HIV incidence, in particular HIV preventive vaccine trials.


Aids Care-psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of Aids\/hiv | 1990

Impact of single session post-partum counselling of HIV infected women on their subsequent reproductive behaviour.

Marleen Temmerman; Stephen Moses; S. Fusallah; Isaac A Wamola; Peter Piot

During an ongoing study investigating the impact of maternal HIV infection on pregnancy outcome at a large maternity hospital in Nairobi, Kenya, asymptomatic HIV positive women who had recently delivered were informed of their HIV sero-status and counselled by a trained nurse regarding contraception and reproductive behaviour in a single session. Both HIV infected women and a comparison group of uninfected women matched for pregnancy outcome were followed up after an interval of one year. Contraceptive use, condom use and pregnancy rates were similar in both groups. Only 37% of HIV infected women had informed their partners of their sero-status. The single session of counselling for the HIV positive women did not seem to influence decisions on subsequent condom use or reproductive behaviour. More intensive approaches to counselling need to be developed and evaluated, but may be difficult to implement in the busy maternity and antenatal clinics commonly found in developing countries.


Sexually Transmitted Infections | 2000

Validity of the vaginal discharge algorithm among pregnant and non-pregnant women in Nairobi, Kenya.

Karoline Fonck; N. Kidula; Walter Jaoko; Benson Estambale; Patricia Claeys; Jo Ndinya-Achola; Patrick Kirui; Job J. Bwayo; Marleen Temmerman

Objective: To evaluate the validity of different algorithms for the diagnosis of gonococcal and chlamydial infections among pregnant and non-pregnant women consulting health services for vaginal discharge in Nairobi, Kenya. Methods: Cross sectional study among 621 women with complaints of vaginal discharge in three city council clinics between April and August 1997. Women were interviewed and examined for symptoms and signs of sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Specimens were obtained for laboratory diagnosis of genital infections, HIV, and syphilis. The data were used to evaluate the Kenyan flow chart as well as several other generated algorithms. Results: The mean age was 24 years and 334 (54%) were pregnant. The overall prevalence rates were: 50% candidiasis, 23% trichomoniasis, 9% bacterial vaginosis, 7% gonorrhoea, 9% chlamydia, 7% syphilis, and 22% HIV. In non-pregnant women, gonococcal and chlamydial infection was significantly associated with (1) demographic and behavioural risk markers such as being single, younger than 20 years, multiple sex partners in the previous 3 months; (2) symptom fever; and (3) signs including presence of yellow or bloody vaginal discharge, cervical mucopus, cervical erythema, and friability. Among pregnant women only young age, dysuria, and fever were significantly associated with cervical infection. However, none of these variables was either sensitive or specific enough for the diagnosis of cervical infection. Several algorithms were generated and applied to the study data. The algorithm including risk markers performed slightly better than the current Kenyan algorithm. Conclusion: STIs form a major problem in the Nairobi area and should be addressed accordingly. None of the tested algorithms for the treatment of vaginal discharge would constitute a marked improvement of the existing flow chart. Hence, better detection tools for the specific aetiology of vaginal discharge are urgently needed.


American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology | 1995

RISK-FACTORS FOR MOTHER-TO-CHILD TRANSMISSION OF HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS-1 INFECTION.

Marleen Temmerman; Aggrey Nyongo; Jj Bwayo; Katrien Fransen; Mieke Coppens; Peter Piot

Abstract OBJECTIVE: Our aim was to examine maternal, obstetric, and infant characteristics of mother-to-child transmission of human immunodeficiency virus-1 in Nairobi, Kenya. STUDY DESIGN: Proviral human immunodeficiency virus-1 was detected by polymerase chain reaction in peripheral blood samp0les taken between 6 weeks and 3 months of age from 107 children born to human immunodeficiency virus-1 seropositive women. The association of maternal, infant, and obstetric variables with human immunodeficiency virus-1 transmission was examined. RESULTS: The mother-to-child transmission rate was 31% (95% confidence interval 21.6 to 40.2) as defined by the presence of proviral human immunodeficiency virus-1 in the infant. Variables associated with transmission in a univariate analysis included placental inflammation ( 7 12 in the transmitting group as compared with 2 22 in nontransmitters, p = 0.006), low maternal CD4 and high CD8 percentages (21% and 52%, respectively, in transmitting mothers and 32% and 40% in nontransmitting mothers; p = 0.001), and the gender of the neonates ( 20 29 infected neonates were female as compared with 26 65 noninfected children, p = 0.02). Sexually transmitted diseases were found more often in transmitting mothers but the differences were not significant. Birth weight and gestational age were not related to vertical transmission of human immunodeficiency virus-1. CONCLUSION: Risk factors for mother-to-child transmission of human immunodeficiency virus-1 included chorioamnionitis, an impaired maternal immune status, and female gender.


International Journal of Cancer | 2008

Human papillomavirus types in women with invasive cervical carcinoma by HIV status in Kenya

Hugo De Vuyst; Peter Gichangi; Benson Estambale; Eliud Njuguna; Silvia Franceschi; Marleen Temmerman

To evaluate the fraction of invasive cervical carcinoma (ICC) that could be prevented in HIV‐infected women by vaccines currently available against human papillomavirus (HPV)16 and 18, we conducted a cross‐sectional study in women with ICC in Nairobi, Kenya. Fifty‐one HIV‐positive women were frequency‐matched by age to 153 HIV‐negative women. Cervical cells were tested for HPV DNA using polymerase chain reaction‐based assays (SPF10‐INNO‐LiPA). Comparisons were adjusted for multiplicity of HPV types. As expected, multiple‐type infections were much more frequent in HIV‐positive (37.2%) than in HIV‐negative (13.7%) women, but the distribution of HPV types was similar. HPV16 was detected in 41.2% versus 43.8% and HPV16 and/or 18 in 64.7% versus 60.1% of HIV‐positive versus HIV‐negative women, respectively. The only differences of borderline statistical significance were an excess of HPV52 (19.6% versus 5.2%) and a lack of HPV45 (7.8% versus 17.0%) in HIV‐positive women compared to HIV‐negative women, respectively. We have been able to assess an unprecedented number of ICCs in HIV‐positive women, but as we did not know the age of HIV acquisition, we cannot exclude that it had occurred too late in life to affect the type of HPV involved in cervical carcinogenesis. However, if our findings were confirmed, they would suggest that the efficacy of current vaccines against HPV16 and 18 to prevent ICC is similar in HIV‐positive and HIV‐negative women, provided vaccination is administered before sexual debut, as recommended.

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F Keli

University of Nairobi

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