Doxycycline prophylaxis for the prevention of sexually transmitted infections : a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials

Szondy, I [Szondy, István (Hidradenitis supp...), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Centre for Translational Medicine (SU / KSZE); Meznerics, F A [Meznerics, Fanni Adél (Bőrgyógyászat), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Centre for Translational Medicine (SU / KSZE); Lőrincz, K [Lőrincz, Kende Kálmán (Bőrgyógyászat), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Kemény, L V [Kemény, Lajos Vince (Bőrgyógyászat, on...), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Department of Physiology (SU / FM / I); HCEMM-SU Translational Dermatology Research Group (SU / FM / C / DDDV); Centre for Translational Medicine (SU / KSZE); Walter, A; Mohammed, A A; Hegyi, P [Hegyi, Péter (Gasztroenterológia), author] Institute for Translational Medicine (UP / UPMS); Institute of Pancreatic Diseases (SU / FM / C); Centre for Translational Medicine (SU / KSZE); Kiss, N [Kiss, Norbert (Orvostudomány), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Bánvölgyi, A ✉ [Bánvölgyi, András (bőrgyógyászat), author] Department of Dermatology, Dermatooncology and ... (SU / FM / C); Centre for Translational Medicine (SU / KSZE)

English Survey paper (Journal Article) Scientific
  • SJR Scopus - Infectious Diseases: Q1
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To investigate the effects of doxycycline pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis (doxy-PrEP/PEP) on bacterial sexually transmitted infections (STIs) by conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis.PubMed, Embase, and CENTRAL were searched for randomised controlled trials (RCTs), including ongoing studies published until 7 November 2023. Our primary endpoint was the incidence of bacterial STIs measured as the number of visits with an STI per total number of visits. Random-effects model was used to estimate pooled effect sizes. The study was registered with PROSPERO, CRD42023478486.We identified six eligible studies containing data from seven articles and four conference abstracts, enrolling men who have sex with men (MSM), transgender women (TGW) and cisgender women (CGW). The pooled analysis of 1,766 participants with 602 newly diagnosed STIs showed a 56% decrease in the overall STI incidence using doxy-PrEP/PEP (RR=0.44; 95%CI: 0.30-0.65; I2=73%). For doxy-PEP, including MSM and TGW only, the RR observed for overall STI incidence was 0.40 (95%CI: 0.28-0.57; I²=37%), 0.19 (95%CI: 0.08-0.44; I²=39%) for chlamydia, 0.23 (0.14-0.36; I²=0%) for syphilis and 0.55 (95%CI: 0.34-0.87; I²=41%) for gonorrhoea. No serious adverse were reported in the studies. The certainty of evidence regarding the efficacy of doxy-PEP among MSM and TGW was graded as high.Doxy-PEP significantly reduces the number of new cases of chlamydia and syphilis and is potentially effective against gonorrhoea, influenced by local resistance patterns. Thus, it is a promising tool in the prevention of bacterial STIs among MSM and TGW.
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2025-04-25 17:29