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Rise and Fall of Syphilis Said Normal

Bob Marks | 05.02.2005 06:05 | Education | Gender | Health

A recent rise in syphilis rates in the United States is probably due to
natural cycles rather than an increase in unsafe sex or other behaviors,
according to a new study.

Rise and Fall of Syphilis Said Normal
By MATT CRENSON
AP National Writer

January 27, 2005, 7:26 AM EST

A recent rise in syphilis rates in the United States is probably due to
natural cycles rather than an increase in unsafe sex or other behaviors,
according to a new study.

The finding is encouraging to public health authorities who have worried
that increasing syphilis infection, especially among gay and bisexual men,
is a sign that people at high risk for HIV have grown complacent about
practicing safe sex.

Syphilis has been on the rise in the United States since 2000, when the
incidence of the disease was at its lowest in six decades. In 2003, the
most recent year for which data are available, 7,177 cases were reported,
compared with 5,979 in 2000.

"One would expect for the next few years for syphilis incidence to
continue to rise," said Nicholas C. Grassly, one of the study's authors.
Similar jumps in syphilis incidence have been observed in the past. When
syphilis rates peaked in the early 1970s, some researchers blamed the
sexual revolution; when infections rose again a decade later, they were
attributed to the spread of crack cocaine.

Grassly and his colleagues argue in this week's issue of the journal
Nature that syphilis infection follows a natural cycle that peaks at
eight- to
11-year intervals. Though sexual behavior certainly influences the overall
number of people infected, the researchers concluded, those regular ups
and downs are an intrinsic property of the disease itself.

The researchers discovered the oscillating pattern by examining syphilis
infection trends in 68 U.S. cities over the past 50 years. But when they
looked at the pattern of gonorrhea infection over the same period, the
pattern was absent. Gonorrhea rates tended to rise over the second half of
the 20th century, then fell gradually beginning around 1980.

Because the diseases spread the same way, if changes in sexual behavior
had caused the oscillating pattern in syphilis they should have created a
similar pattern in gonorrhea. Yet gonorrhea rates show a steady rise from
the 1950s through the 1970s, followed by a steady fall.

"You don't see these repeated, regular epidemics," said Grassly, an
epidemiologist at Imperial College in London. He wrote the Nature paper
with Christophe Fraser and Geoffrey P. Garnett, also of Imperial College.

The key to the difference between syphilis and gonorrhea is immunity.

Unlike those who catch gonorrhea, people who recover from syphilis can
resist re-infection for some time afterward. That means when the disease
sweeps through a city, it leaves a relatively immune population in its
wake
and infection rates fall.

But as the population gradually evolves, the proportion of susceptible
individuals rises and so do infection rates. Using a computer model,
Grassly and his colleagues showed that the time from one peak to the next
should be about a decade.

"It's a kind of neat piece of detective work," said Bryan Grenfell, a
biologist at Pennsylvania State University who studies childhood
infectious
diseases. Many of those illnesses, such as measles and chickenpox, also
follow oscillating patterns.

The British researchers detected another interesting pattern in the data
as well. Until about 1980, syphilis rates in different cities varied
independently. Houston might be experiencing a peak at the same time that
New York was going through a trough. But more recently, syphilis rates
have become much more uniform in the United States.

Bob Marks
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