• Sex Transm Dis · Mar 2007

    HIV and syphilis: when to perform a lumbar puncture.

    • Agnès Libois, Stéphane De Wit, Bénédicte Poll, Felipe Garcia, Eric Florence, Ana Del Rio, Paquita Sanchez, Eugenia Negredo, Marc Vandenbruaene, José M Gatell, and Nathan Clumeck.
    • Service des maladies infectieuses, CHU Saint-Pierre, 322 rue haute, 1000 Brussels, Belgium. agnes_libois@stpierre-bru.be
    • Sex Transm Dis. 2007 Mar 1; 34 (3): 141-4.

    ObjectivesThe objectives of this study were to determine predictive factors for neurosyphilis in HIV-infected patients with syphilis and optimize the use of lumbar puncture.Study DesignThe authors reviewed 112 cases of HIV-infected patients with syphilis who underwent a lumbar puncture. Diagnosis of neurosyphilis was based on a cerebrospinal fluid white blood cells count > or =20/microL, and/or a reactive cerebrospinal fluid-Venereal Disease Research Laboratory, and/or a positive intrathecal T. pallidum antibody (ITPA) index.ResultsTwenty-six of 112 had neurosyphilis. Neurologic manifestations and serum rapid plasma reagin (RPR) were associated with neurosyphilis (P = 0.036, P = 0.018, respectively). In multivariate analysis, log(2)RPR was still associated with neurosyphilis (P = 0.005). In patients without neurologic manifestations, the risk of neurosyphilis increases gradually with log(2)RPR. A serum RPR of 1/32 seems to be the best cutoff point to decide the performance or not of a lumbar puncture (sensitivity 100%, specificity 40%).ConclusionIn HIV-infected patients with syphilis, lumbar puncture could be restricted to those with neurologic manifestations or a serum RPR > or =1/32.

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