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Lymphogranuloma venereum (LGV)

BASHH LGV 2013. Last updated: Dec 2013.

Aetiology

LGV is an invasive STI caused by Chlamydia trachomatis serovars L1-L3, which causes more severe inflammation than the non-LGV serovars (A–K), covered in the Chlamydia article.

Clinical Features

Most UK cases are among MSM involved in dense sexual networks/party scene, not linked to LGV-endemic countries

There are 2 main presentations:

Classic inguinal syndrome (heterosexual presentation) Classic 3-stage progression:

  • Primary stage: small, painless genital papule / ulcer
    • Often unnoticed and self-resolving
    • Often found on coronal sulcus of men and posterior vaginal wall, fourchette, vulva or cervix of women
  • Secondary stage (2-6 weeks later): painfulunilateral inguinal and/or femoral lymphadenopathy
    • Pathognomonic (only present in 15-20% cases): “groove sign” – visible depression between enlarged inguinal and femoral lymph nodes, caused by the inguinal ligament separating the two groups
    • Lymphadenopathy can progress into periadenitis and bubo formation, buboes may ulcerate and discharge pus, creating chronic fistulae
  • Tertiary stage (from chronic inflammation and if untreated)
    • Proctocolitis mimicking Crohn’s disease
    • Scarring of the vulva
    • Genital lymphoedema (elephantiasis) with persistent suppuration and pyoderma
Anorectal syndrome (MSM presentation) Primary manifestation: haemorrhagic proctitis

  • Rectal pain
  • Anorectal bleeding
  • Mucoid and/or haemopurulent rectal discharge
  • Tenesmus
  • Constipatoin
  • Systemic symptoms (e.g. fever and malaise)

LGV should be suspected in the following patient (exam-rule):

  • MSM + proctitis
  • Painless genital ulcer + painful inguinal lymphadenopathy (unlike in syphilis; there is painless ulcer and painless lymphadenopathy)

Investigation and Diagnosis

Sample collection:

  • Ulcer base exudate or from rectal mucosa
  • Aspiration of lymph node or bubo
  • Rectal and pharyngeal swabs from MSM and women exposed at those sites
  • Urethral swab or first-catch urine specimen when urethritis and/or inguinal lymphadenopathy is present

Tests:

NAAT 1st line test:

  • Step 1: test for Chlamydia trachomatis DNA
  • Step 2: typing for LGV-specific DNA
Rectal swab microscopy Presence of polymorphonuclear leukocytes is predictive of LGV proctitis

Esp. in HIV +ve MSM

Other tests
  • Serology cannot necessarily distinguish past from current LGV infection and is only available in specialised laboratories
  • Culture is rarely available and labour-intensive

Management

Similar to those described in the Chlamydia article:

  • 1st line: doxycycline for 21 days
  • 2nd line: azithromycin or erythromycin

Reference

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