Trichomoniasis
Overview
- In Australia, trichomonas is more common in older people, people from regional and remote areas, especially Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people and street-based sex workers.
- Uncommon cause of vaginal discharge or penile urethritis in urban settings.
- Long natural history (years) if not treated.
- Without treatment, the infection is cleared more quickly in a penis than in a vagina.
- Trichomonas vaginalis, a protozoan which infects the vagina, urethra and paraurethral glands.
Symptoms |
|
Complications |
|
Special considerations
- Up to 50% of vaginal infections are asymptomatic; urethral infections are usually asymptomatic.
- May enhance human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) transmission.
- Testing is not routinely recommended for people with urethritis.
- Screening is not recommended except in high prevalence populations; refer to local guidelines.
- Treat contacts presumptively.
Site/Specimen |
Test |
Consideration |
High vaginal swab |
NAAT |
|
NAAT |
|
NAAT – Nucleic Acid Amplification Test
Specimen collection guidance
Principal treatment options |
||
Situation |
Recommended |
Alternative |
Uncomplicated infection |
Metronidazole 400 mg PO with food, BD for 7 days |
Metronidazole 2 g PO with food, stat |
Treatment advice
- Re-infection and poor adherence should be ruled out in persistent or recurrent infection.
- Seek specialist advice if suspected metronidazole resistance or contraindication.
- Avoid alcohol with metronidazole treatment and for 24 hours thereafter.
Other immediate management
- Advise no sexual contact for 7 days after treatment is commenced, or until the course is completed and symptoms resolved, whichever is later.
- Recommend that their current sexual partner is treated.
- Contact tracing.
- Provide patient with factsheet.
- Trichomoniasis is only a notifiable condition in the Northern Territory.
Special considerations
- Consider seeking specialist advice before treating any complicated presentation.
Situation |
Recommended |
Category B2 in pregnancy |
|
Breastfeeding |
Metronidazole may affect taste of breast milk; avoid high doses in breastfeeding. |
Allergy to principal treatment choice |
There is no effective alternative to 5-nitroimidazole compounds. Metronidazole desensitisation has been described. |
People living with HIV |
Reports indicate single-dose metronidazole is less effective than extended metronidazole. |
- There is currently insufficient data to provide a definitive period for contact tracing, focus on current and recent partners.
- Test from genital sites.
- Consider presumptive treatment if there has been sexual contact within the past 2 weeks or when the person's individual circumstances mean later treatment may not occur.
- Partners with a penis may test negative for trichomonas as it is more likely to resolve spontaneously in these people.
See Australasian Contact Tracing Manual - Trichomoniasis for more information
Review in 1 week provides an opportunity to:
- Confirm patient adherence with treatment and assess for symptom resolution.
- Confirm contact tracing procedures have been undertaken or offer more contact tracing support.
- Educate about condom use, contraception, HIV PrEP/PEP, safe injecting practices, consent, CST and vaccinations for HAV, HBV and HPV as indicated.
Test of cure
Not recommended unless symptoms persist.
Retesting
- For patients who remain symptomatic or where partner treatment remains uncertain, retesting should be performed after 4 weeks.
- This also provides the opportunity to retest, post the window period, for other STIs.
100% of vaginal infections diagnosed are treated with recommended principal treatment option
- Dize L, Agreda P, Quinn N, Barnes MR, Hsieh YH, Gaydos CA. Comparison of self-obtained penile-meatal swabs to urine for the detection of C. trachomatis, N. gonorrhoeae and T. vaginalis. Sex Transm Infect 2013;89:305-7.
- Lusk MJ, Naing Z, Rayner B, Rismanto N, McIver CJ, Cumming RG, et al. Trichomonas vaginalis: underdiagnosis in urban Australia could facilitate re-emergence. Sex Transm Infect 2010;86:227-30.
- British Association for Sexual Health and HIV (BASHH). Trichomonas vaginalis . Available at: https://www.bashh.org/guidelines (last accessed 24 October 2021).