Test-of-cure for asymptomatic genital chlamydial infections in women. A cost-benefit analysis.

1992 
Asymptomatic genital infection caused by Chlamydia Trachomatis is common, and one or more test-of-cure consultations in such cases is routine. The economic implications of two post-treatment strategies, either no test-of-cure, or one test-of-cure consultation with a single test for C. Trachomatis, renewed treatment, and another test-of-cure of those still chlamydiapositive, and so on, have been compared. The costs of the test-of-cure strategy are twice those of the no-test regimen. Without test-of-cure, 79 more cases of pelvic inflammatory disease, 8 cases of infertility requiring treatment, and 2 cases of ectopic pregnancy would occur for every 10,000 patients
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