Public Health Reviews: Effectiveness of Condoms in Preventing Sexually Transmitted Infections

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Public Health Reviews

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing sexually transmitted


infections
King K. Holmes,1 Ruth Levine,2 & Marcia Weaver3

Abstract In June 2000, the United States National Institutes of Health (NIH) organized a review of the scientic evidence on the
effectiveness of condoms in preventing sexually transmitted infections (STIs). The review concluded that condoms were effective
in protecting against transmission of HIV to women and men and in reducing the risk of men becoming infected with gonorrhoea.
Evidence for the effectiveness of condoms in preventing other STIs was considered to be insufcient. We review the ndings of
prospective studies published after June 2000 that evaluated the effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs. We searched Medline
for publications in English and included other articles, reports, and abstracts of which we were aware. These prospective studies,
published since June 2000, show that condom use is associated with statistically signicant protection of men and women against
several other types of STIs, including chlamydial infection, gonorrhoea, herpes simplex virus type 2, and syphilis. Condoms may
also be associated with protecting women against trichomoniasis. While no published prospective study has found protection
against genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection, two studies reported that condom use was associated with higher rates
of regression of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia and clearance of cervical HPV infection in women and with regression of
HPV-associated penile lesions in men. Research ndings available since the NIH review add considerably to the evidence of the
effectiveness of condoms against STIs. Although condoms are not 100% effective, partial protection can substantially reduce
the spread of STIs within populations.
Keywords Condoms/utilization; Sexually transmitted diseases/prevention and control; Herpes genitalis/prevention and control;
Gonorrhea/prevention and control; Chlamydia infections/prevention and control; Trichomonas vaginitis/prevention and control;
Syphilis/prevention and control; Papillomavirus, Human; Prospective studies; Review literature (source: MeSH, NLM).
Mots cls Condom/utilisation; Maladies sexuellement transmissibles/prvention et contrle; Herps gnital/prvention et contrle;
Gonococcie/prvention et contrle; Chlamydia, Infection/prvention et contrle; Vaginite trichomonas/prvention et contrle; Syphilis/
prvention et contrle; Papillomavirus humain; Etude prospective; Revue de la littrature (source: MeSH, INSERM).
Palabras clave Condones/utilizacin; Enfermedades sexualmente transmisibles/ prevencin y control; Herpes genital/ prevencin
y control; Gonorrea/ prevencin y control; Infecciones por chlamydia/ prevencin y control; Vaginitis por trichomonas/ prevencin y
control; Slis/ prevencin y control; Papilomavirus humano; Estudios prospectivos; Literatura de revisin (fuente: DeCS, BIREME).

Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2004;82:454-461.

Voir page 459 le rsum en franais. En la pgina 460 gura un resumen en espaol.

Introduction
In June 2000, the United States National Institutes of Health
(NIH), in collaboration with the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention (CDC), the Food and Drug Administration and the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID),
convened an expert panel to evaluate peer-reviewed published
studies on the effectiveness of latex condoms used by men (male
latex condoms) in preventing sexually transmitted infections

(STIs) during vaginal intercourse (1). The NIH denes condom


effectiveness as the level of protection against STDs (sexually
transmitted diseases) when condoms are used consistently and
correctly (1).
The review looked at HIV infection, gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection, syphilis, chancroid, trichomoniasis, genital
herpes and genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection.
The panel of 28 researchers excluded papers with awed study
designs or methods.

Professor, Department of Medicine, and Director, Center for AIDS and STD, University of Washington, 325 9th Avenue, Seattle, WA 98104, USA
(email: [email protected]). Correspondence should be sent to this author.
2
Research consultant, Center for Health Education and Research, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
3
Research associate professor, Department of Health Services, University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA.
Ref No. 03-008813
(Submitted: 15 October 2003 Final revised version received: 13 March 2004 Accepted: 1 April 2004)
1

454

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King K. Holmes et al.

Based on the results of the remaining prospective studies,


the panel reached three key conclusions. First, consistent condom
use (i.e., using condoms during every act of vaginal intercourse)
among heterosexual couples in which one partner was infected
with HIV reduced the risk of HIV transmission from men to
women and vice versa. This nding was based on a meta-analysis
of condom effectiveness studies by Davis & Weller (2). They
estimated that compared with no condom use, consistent condom use resulted in an overall 87% reduction in risk of HIV
transmission, with the best-case and worst-case scenarios ranging
from 60% to 96%. In an update of this analysis, Weller &
Davis reported a revised estimate of an 80% reduction in risk
with a range of 3594% (3).
Second, the NIH report concluded that consistent condom use may reduce the risk of gonorrhoea in men. This nding
was based on a 1978 report by Hooper et al. (4), which was a
prospective study of the risk of transmission of gonorrhoea to
men in the United States Navy from a pool of women with a
known prevalence of gonorrhoea. A subsequent reanalysis of
those data showed that condoms provided a statistically signicant level of protection against the combined outcome of
gonorrhoea or nongonococcal urethritis in exposed men (5).
Third, due to insufcient evidence from prospective
studies, the reviewers were unable to determine the effectiveness
of condoms in preventing gonorrhoea and chlamydial infection
in women, or in preventing syphilis, chancroid, trichomoniasis,
genital herpes or genital HPV inf ection in men or women. The
panel strongly cautioned the public against misinterpreting the
scanty evidence. The small number of well designed prospective studies precluded the panel from making judgments about
the effectiveness of condoms in preventing other STIs; the
reviews stated that the lack of data were not to be construed
as evidence either supporting or denying the effectiveness of
condoms.
As the NIH prepared to release its report in July 2001,
other health agencies responded to the pending report (6, 7).
For example, the CDC reviewed its treatment guidelines for
STIs that were issued in 2000, and in the same month that the
NIH released its report, reasserted the protective value of condoms against STIs (7). WHO included condom programmes
among the essential components of public health packages for
preventing and controlling STIs in the most recent edition
of the Guidelines for the management of sexually transmitted
infections (8).
Since the NIH review, reports of several additional prospective studies have further addressed the effectiveness of
condoms. A literature review by Hearst & Chen (9) considered
several lines of evidence for the efcacy of condom use and
other behavioural changes in preventing the sexual transmission
of HIV; it also discussed related issues about HIV prevention
programmes.
We examine ndings that have become available since
June 2000 from prospective studies of the effectiveness of male
condoms in preventing STIs and briey discuss the limitations
of these studies and the effectiveness of programmes to promote
condom use.

Methods
We searched Medline for articles published in English after
June 2000 with the keyword effectiveness and the MeSH
heading condom and with the following three MeSH terms:
condoms, evaluation studies, and sexually transmitted
Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

diseases. We reviewed the abstracts of the selected studies to


identify prospective cohort studies. We also conducted a limited search for randomized controlled trials using the MeSH
heading condom and the MeSH term sexually transmitted
diseases. In addition, we identied and reviewed other articles,
reports and abstracts that we were aware of having been published, presented, or reported after June 2000.

Findings
Point estimates and condence intervals of prospective studies
on the effectiveness of condom use in preventing STIs are
presented in Fig. 1. A summary of the design and participants
in those studies can be found in Table 1 (web version only,
available at: http://www.who.int/bulletin).

Herpes simplex virus type 2


Genital herpes, usually caused by infection with herpes simplex
virus type 2 (HSV-2), is a chronic disease found throughout
the world; in sub-Saharan Africa, the seroprevalence of HSV-2
is 70% or higher. Genital HSV infection is transmissible even
when partners have no active genital symptoms or lesions.
Prospective studies conducted in the United States have
shown that condoms partially protect men and women against
new infections with HSV-2 (12, A. Wald et al., unpublished
data presented at the 2002 National STD Prevention Conference in San Diego, CA). In one study (12), Wald et al. analysed
data from an HSV-2 candidate vaccine trial conducted in
the mid-1990s that followed 528 monogamous, HSV-2-discordant couples (one partner was infected with HSV-2, the
other was not) for 18 months. The median reported use of
condoms was 25% ; it was relatively low because the couples
were monogamous. Using condoms during more than 25%
of sex acts was associated with a 92% reduction in the risk of
women acquiring HSV-2 but was not associated with a protective effect among men.
However, in a separate trial of this candidate vaccine
among people with more than three sexual partners or at least
one STI in the past year, Wald et al. found that the median
reported use of condoms was 65%, and that using condoms
during more than 65% of acts of vaginal or rectal penetration
provided partial protection for men (A. Wald et al., unpublished data, presented at the 2002 National STD Prevention
Conference in San Diego, CA). Nonetheless, HSV-2 infection
was acquired, although rarely, even by people who reported
using condoms during 100% of sexual activity.

Gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection, trichomoniasis


and syphilis
For the rst time, Sanchez et al. (13) demonstrated the statistically signicant effectiveness of condoms in preventing not
only gonorrhoea, but also chlamydial infection and trichomoniasis in women. A cohort of 917 female sex workers in Lima,
Peru, were re-examined monthly for STIs; they were also given
condoms. During the observation period of 7908 personmonths, the reported rate of consistent condom use rose by
20%. Compared with all others, those women who reported
using condoms consistently since the previous examination
had a 62% reduction in the risk of acquiring gonorrhoea and
a 26% reduction in the risk of acquiring chlamydial infection.
There was also evidence of a signicant reduction in the risk
of acquiring trichomoniasis.
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Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

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King K. Holmes et al.

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King K. Holmes et al.

Macaluso et al. (unpublished report submitted to the US


National Institute of Child Health and Human Development,
2000) found that among women considered to be at high-risk
for STIs the consistent and correct use of latex male condoms
or female condoms was associated with a statistically signicant
reduction in the combined incidence of gonorrhoea, chlamydial
infection or syphilis in high-risk women when compared to
rates of use of less than 50%. This prospective study followed
female patients at STD clinics in the United States who had
monthly STI tests for six months from 1995 to 1998.
Crosby et al.(14) reported that using condoms for 100% of
sex acts was associated with a signicant reduction in the combined
incidence of gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection, or trichomoniasis
among adolescent African-American females aged 1418 years.
In this study, the researchers tested for all three STIs and treated
girls who were infected at baseline. Six months later, the 380 girls
who reported penilevaginal sex were retested and interviewed
about condom use. Of the girls who reported using cond oms each
time they had had sex since baseline, 17.8% of them had at least
one STI compared with 30% of the girls who did not report using
condoms consistently (odds ratio (OR) = 1.85; 95% condence
interval (CI) = 1.133.04 after adjusting for STI at baseline and
having more than one sex partner in the interim).
Ahmed et al. (10) analysed data from a community-based
randomized controlled trial of mass treatment for STIs in rural
Rakai, Uganda, from 1994 to 1998. HIV prevalence among the
study population was 16%; the prevalence of syphilis was 10%,
chlamydial infection was 3.1% and gonorrhoea was 1.5%. Of
the 17 264 adult participants, only 4.4% reported consistently
using condoms in the year prior to the study. During followup, for men and women combined, consistent condom use
was associated with a signicant reduction in the incidence of
STIs when compared with the non-use of condoms. There was
a signicant reduction in the incidence of HIV (relative risk
(RR) = 0.37; 95% CI = 0.150.88), a signicant reduction in
syphilis seroprevalence (OR = 0.71; 95% CI = 0.530.94) and
a signicant reduction in the prevalence of gonorrhoea, chlamydial infection, or both (OR = 0.50; 95% CI = 0.250.97).
The prevalences of trichomoniasis and bacterial vaginosis among
women were not reduced.

Human papillomavirus infection


Manhart & Koutsky (22) evaluated the effectiveness of condoms
in protecting against HPV infection and HPV-related conditions, such as genital warts and cervical cancer. A meta-analysis
of 20 studies found no evidence that condoms were effective
against genital HPV infection. Neither of the two prospective
studies reviewed found that consistent condom use was effective
in preventing genital HPV infection or HPV-related conditions. Subsequently, Winer et al. (19) followed 444 female
students at university as part of a longitudinal study of the
cumulative incidence of genital HPV infection. They found
that consistently using condoms with a new partner was not
associated with significant protection against HPV (hazard
ratio (HR) = 0.8; 95% CI = 0.51.2). Data on condom
breakage or vaginal penetration before condoms were put
on were not collected, nor was the analysis adjusted for
frequency of intercourse.
Dunne et al. reviewed the methods of 44 studies conducted between 1996 and 2001 that examined condom use,
HPV infection, and HPV-related conditions (EF Dunne et al.,
unpublished data presented at the HPV Clinical Workshop and
Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

20th International Papillomavirus Conference, Paris, 2002).


They found that methodological limitations made it difcult
to accurately assess condom effectiveness, and they called for
studies to consider the consistency and correctness of condom
use, incident infections, and the infection status of the partner
in the design of studies.
In a unique clinical trial in the Netherlands, Hogewoning
et al. (20) randomly allocated 135 women not regularly using
condoms who had untreated cervical intraepithelial neoplasia
(CIN) and their male partners either to use condoms or not use
condoms for all instances of vaginal intercourse. Those couples
randomized to use condoms had a signicantly higher cumulative two-year rate of disease regression (53% versus 35%;
HR = 3.1; 95% CI = 1.47.1) as well as a higher cumulative
two-year rate of HPV clearance (23% versus 4%; HR = 12.1;
95% CI = 1.597.2).
Bleeker et al. (21) examined the male partners of the
women in this study for the presence of penile lesions and for
HPV using polymerase chain reaction testing of penile swabs.
Consistent condom use over a minimum period of three months
was associated with a reduction in the median time until clinical
regression of all penile lesions (HR for regression = 1.8; 95%
CI = 1.03.3; P = 0.05 by Cox regression analysis). Interpreting
the ndings of these two studies is not simple (20, 21). The
authors suggest that transmission of HPV back and forth between partners during unprotected sex may prolong the duration
of HPV infection, CIN, and penile lesions.

Discussion
This review of prospective studies published since June 2000
has identied evidence that consistent condom use is associated
not only with reduced transmission of HIV and with reduced
acquisition of urethral infection among men, but also with:
reduced acquisition of genital HSV-2 infection by men and
women;
reduced acquisition of syphilis by men and women;
reduced acquisition of chlamydial infection by men and
women;
reduced acquisition of gonorrhoea by women
possibly reduced acquisition of trichomoniasis infection by
women;
accelerated regression of cervical and penile HPV-associated
lesions and accelerated clearance of genital HPV infection
by women.

Limitations of studies
Only in prospective studies can the temporal relationship
between STIs and condom use be explored. Because many
prospective studies have now shown that condom use reduces
the transmission of HIV and several other STIs, randomized
trials with a high-risk control group that doesnt use condoms
have been viewed as unwarranted. Although many studies have
randomly allocated people or samples to various prevention interventions that included the enhanced promotion of condom
use, we believe the two studies of couples with HPV-related
conditions (20, 21) are the only trials in which participants
were randomly allocated to condom use or no condom use. The
study was strengthened by randomization of couples rather than
individuals, randomization to consistent condom use compared
with no condom use, and by measurement of outcomes in male
and female partners simultaneously.
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Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

Two methodological issues in observational studies of


condom effectiveness are of particular concern: (1) underestimation of point estimates, and (2) exposure to infected partners.
Underestimates of condom effectiveness could result from
over-reporting of condom use by participants in order to satisfy
the interviewer (known as social desirability bias). Devine &
Aral (23) conducted simulation experiments to illustrate that
over-reporting of condom use reduced both the point estimate
of condom effectiveness and the power of the study to detect a
protective effect of condom use.
Studies that do not adjust for the improper use of condoms could also underestimate the effectiveness of proper use.
(24) For example, in a retrospective study in the United States
among 98 male university students selected because they had
used condoms during vaginal intercourse at least ve or more
times, and at least once during the previous month, Warner et
al. (24) found that in 13% of 270 instances, condoms broke
or were used incorrectly; this allowed for direct penilevaginal
contact, and consequently, exposure to STIs.
Restricting condom effectiveness analyses to participants
with known exposure to infected partners reduces confounding
and provides a more accurate measurement of the protective
effects of condoms against STIs. In a cross-sectional analysis of
baseline data from Project RESPECT, Warner et al. (25) compared estimates of the effectiveness of condoms in a subsample
of people with known exposure (they were referred to the clinic
because their partner had gonorrhoea or chlamydial infection)
with estimates in a subsample of people who visited the clinic for
other reasons. Among the 429 participants with known exposure,
the consistent use of condoms was associated with a signicant
reduction in those STIs (OR = 0.42; 95% CI = 0.180.99).
Among the 4314 participants for whom exposure information
was not known, the consistent use of condoms was less effective
(OR = 0.82; 95% CI = 0.661.01).
Fitch et al. (26) note the importance of differentiating
between effectiveness in single-episode use and period effectiveness. The latter measure takes into account user error, condom
failure, the variable infectiousness of particular STIs, and the
impact of repeated exposure. Also, it has proven far more feasible
to promote condom use during occasional acts of commercial
or casual sex than to introduce and sustain consistent condom
use during repeated acts of intercourse over years among stable
couples (9).
Crosby et al. (27) identied several potential problems
and solutions in condom effectiveness studies.
An infection-free cohort should be established at baseline
through testing and treatment of nonviral STIs.
It is essential to have sample sizes that are adequate to detect
a signicant impact of condom use.
Using the number of unprotected sex acts is preferable to
calculating the percentage of times that a condom is used,
as the latter does not account for variation in frequency of
intercourse.
In view of these issues, it seems remarkable that data from longitudinal studies and the one randomized trial as well as several
cross-sectional or casecontrol studies have nonetheless demonstrated the statistically signicant effectiveness of condoms in
protecting against HIV and most of the other STIs examined.
Not all earlier prospective observational studies found
that consistent condom use was associated with a decreased
risk of STIs. For example, Bunnell et al. (15) followed 484
adolescents at four clinics over a six-month period and found
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King K. Holmes et al.

an incident STI in 21% of 61 participants reporting 100%


condom use and in 23% of 423 adolescents reporting inconsistent use or no condom use. Zenilman et al. (16) prospectively
studied condom use among 598 male and female patients at
an STD clinic in Baltimore, Maryland. During follow-up STI
incidence was similar for participants reporting 100% condom
use and for those reporting that they never used condoms; this
was found for both male and female patients. However, when
specic STI incidence was examined rather than combined STI
incidence, consistent condom use (as compared with sometime
use or never use) was associated with a signicantly lower rate
of chlamydial infection in men (1, 16).

Recommendations for further research


Future research using improved methods for ascertaining the
consistency, correctness, and selectivity of condom use may lead
to better point estimates of effectiveness. In future trials the
accurate assessment of condom use will help delineate the causal
pathway linkage of the effectiveness of STI prevention methods
that do or do not include the promotion of condom use (28).
The general quality of research on condom effectiveness
in preventing HIV and other STIs can be readily improved
by routinely collecting the partner-specic data in relation to
testing for current STIs or incident HIV infection. Questions
that should be asked include:
How many times did you have sex with a particular partner
during the past month? How many times were condoms not
used with that partner during the past month?
How many times in the past month were condoms put on
after the start of intercourse? How many times were condoms
removed before stopping intercourse? How many times did
condoms slip off or break before intercourse ended?
How many times has a particular partner had an STI in the
past month? What type(s) of STI(s)?
Has that particular partner had other partners during the
past month?
Condom use is typically more common with partners perceived
as likely to be infected than with those not perceived as likely
to be infected. Collecting similar data for the past three-month
period or longer would also be useful, depending on which
STI is being studied. Such information would contribute
to research on condom effectiveness and would strengthen
monitoring and evaluation processes.

The effectiveness of condom-promotion


programmes
The question remains whether programmes designed to increase
the frequency of condom use actually achieve increased use and
whether they decrease the individuals risk of acquiring HIV
and other STIs. Many studies have shown that condom-promotion interventions decrease self-reports of unprotected sex,
but fewer have examined the impact of such programmes on
the actual incidence of STIs, including HIV infection. Fewer
still have done so in randomized controlled trials in which
participants were followed prospectively and specically offered
STI testing. Four individual-level or group-level randomized
controlled trials that have included condom promotion have
reported a reduced risk of STIs (2931) (CB Boyer et al., unpublished data presented at the 15th Biennial Congress of the
International Society for Sexually Transmitted Diseases Research,
Ottawa, 2003).
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King K. Holmes et al.

Project RESPECT, a multisite, individual-level randomized controlled trial involving 5700 heterosexual, HIV-negative
patients at public STI clinics in the United States found that
interactive, client-centred HIV and STI risk reduction counselling that emphasized avoiding unprotected sex resulted in
more frequent reports of 100% condom use and a statistically
signicant 20% lower incidence of STIs over 12 months of
follow-up when compared with counselling that used only
didactic prevention messages (29).
In a group-level -randomized trial, Shain et al. (30) found
that enhanced counselling, which included three intensive,
small-group sessions for female Hispanic and African-American
patients at an STI clinic resulted in a lower incidence of gonorrhoea and chlamydial infection over the following year when
compared with standard counselling. The sessions were based
on ethnographic research; the sessions for Hispanic women
were similar to those for African-American women, but there
were some differences in emphasis. The effect of the intervention
appeared to be mediated by a number of behavioural changes
including increased condom use (32). Two other group-level
randomized trials involving women also showed efcacy in
preventing STIs (31, CB Boyer et al. unpublished data).
A randomized trial of voluntary HIV testing and counselling in Kenya, the United Republic of Tanzania and Trinidad
between 1995 and 1998 (33), which was modelled on the
Project RESPECT intervention, compared client-centred
counselling with giving health information alone. It found
there was a decrease in the incidence of unprotected intercourse
with non-regular partners among those who had counselling.
There was also a reduction of about 20% in new STIs which
was similar to that seen in Project RESPECT but not statistically signicant in this underpowered study.
In a eld trial in Thailand involving nonrandomized but
comparable groups of army conscripts, Celentano et al. (34)
found that groups participating in a multicomponent HIV and
STI prevention intervention that lasted for several months and
contained a condom promotion component had 80% fewer
incident STIs when compared with the control groups.
Finally, a London-based group-randomized trial of a
one-day cognitive behavioural intervention designed to reduce
STI incidence among men who have sex with men had different results (35). The intervention group reported a modest
decrease in the incidence of unprotected anal intercourse but
actually experienced a signicantly increased risk of new STIs
in comparison with the control group. This study illustrates the
importance of measuring objective STI outcomes rather than
relying only on self-reported changes in behaviour.

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

Thus, as with prospective studies of condom efcacy, not


all harm-reduction interventions that include condom promotion
have succeeded in reducing STI morbidity. Success undoubtedly depends on the intervention and the context, among other
factors. Nonetheless, adequately powered studies (i.e., those
having large enough sample sizes) that examined heterosexual
populations have consistently shown a signicant impact on
subsequent STI outcomes when such outcomes have been
measured.

Conclusions
Since 2000 important new evidence (from prospective observational studies, one couple-randomized trial and additional
multicomponent STI prevention trials that included condompromotion components) has come to light to support the effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs in men and women.
In no study has the effectiveness been 100%. Nonetheless,
even partially effective interventions can have a major impact
on controlling the spread of STIs in the population (36). Balanced STI and HIV prevention programmes should include
condom promotion along with a complementary combination
of prevention strategies targeted towards different age groups,
life stages, epidemic levels, and settings (37, 38). Condom promotion represents an important component of comprehensive
HIV-prevention and STI-prevention strategies. O
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank Daniel Halperin, Lee Warner,
Barbara de Zalduondo, and two anonymous reviewers for insightful comments on this article. We would also like to thank
James P. Hughes for statistical advice and Andrew Blair for
graphic design.
This article is one of a series of papers on advances in HIV/
AIDS research. We would like to thank Neen Alrutz at USAID,
Elaine Douglas, Ann Downer, Ron Nelson, Mary Fielder, Holly
Huckeba and Amy Welton at the University of Washington
for their invaluable help in creating the series.
Funding: This work was funded by the Synergy Project,
USAID contract No. HRN-C-00-99-00005-00. The Synergy
Project is managed by TvT Global Health and Development
Strategies, a division of Social & Scientic Systems, Inc. The
opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do
not necessarily reect the views of Social & Scientic Systems,
or USAID.
Conicts of interest: none declared.

Rsum
Efcacit du prservatif pour la prvention des infections sexuellement transmissibles
En juin 2000, les National Institutes of Health (NIH) des Etats-Unis
dAmrique ont organis une revue des preuves scientiques
de lefcacit du prservatif pour la prvention des infections
sexuellement transmissibles (IST). Cet examen a permis de
conclure que le prservatif tait efcace pour la prvention de
la transmission du VIH chez lhomme comme chez la femme et
pour rduire le risque dinfection gonococcique chez lhomme.
Les preuves de son efcacit pour la prvention des autres IST
ont t juges insufsantes. Nous avons examin les rsultats
dtudes prospectives publies aprs juin 2000 et portant sur
Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)

lefcacit des prservatifs pour la prvention des IST. Nous


avons recherch sur Medline les publications en anglais et y
avons ajout dautres articles, rapports et sommaires dont nous
avions connaissance. Ces tudes prospectives publies depuis
juin 2000 montrent que lutilisation du prservatif est associe
une protection statistiquement signicative, chez lhomme
comme chez la femme, contre plusieurs autres types dIST, dont
les infections Chlamydia, les gonococcies, les infections par le
virus de lherps humain type 2 et la syphilis. Elle peut galement
tre associe une protection contre la trichomonase chez la
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Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

femme. Bien quaucune tude prospective publie nait montr


de protection contre linfection gnitale par le papillomavirus
humain (PVH), deux tudes ont rapport un taux plus lev de
rgression des noplasies intrapithliales du col de lutrus et
de disparition des infections cervicales par le PVH chez la femme
en cas dutilisation du prservatif, et une rgression des lsions du

King K. Holmes et al.

pnis associes au PVH chez lhomme. Les rsultats des travaux


effectus depuis la revue des NIH ajoutent considrablement aux
preuves de lefcacit du prservatif contre les IST. Bien que les
prservatifs ne soient pas efcaces 100 %, la protection partielle
quils confrent peut rduire sensiblement la propagation des IST
dans les populations.

Resumen
Ecacia del preservativo como medio de prevencin de las infecciones de transmisin sexual
En junio de 2000, los Institutos Nacionales de Salud (NIH) de los
Estados Unidos organizaron una revisin de la evidencia cientca
disponible sobre la ecacia de los preservativos como medio de
prevencin de las infecciones de transmisin sexual (ITS). El estudio
concluy que los preservativos protegan ecazmente contra el
VIH a hombres y mujeres y reducan el riesgo de que los hombres
contrajeran gonorrea. No obstante, se consider insuciente
la evidencia sobre la ecacia del preservativo como medio de
prevencin de otras ITS. Hemos examinado aqu los resultados de
estudios prospectivos publicados con posterioridad a junio de 2000
en los que se evalu la ecacia de los preservativos como mtodo
de prevencin de las ITS. Buscamos en MEDLINE publicaciones
en ingls, y aadimos otros artculos, informes y resmenes que
conocamos. Estos estudios prospectivos, publicados despus de
junio de 2000, revelan que el uso de preservativos se asocia a una
proteccin estadsticamente signicativa de hombres y mujeres

frente a otros varios tipos de ITS, incluidas las infecciones por


clamidias, la gonorrea, el virus herpes simple tipo 2 y la slis.
Los preservativos tambin pueden proteger a las mujeres contra
la tricomoniasis. Si bien ninguno de los estudios prospectivos
publicados ha revelado un efecto de proteccin contra la infeccin
por el papilomavirus humano (VPH), en dos estudios se observ que
el uso del preservativo se asociaba a mayores tasas de regresin
de las neoplasias intraepiteliales cervicouterinas y de desaparicin
de la infeccin cervicouterina por VPH en las mujeres, as como
de regresin de las lesiones de pene por VPH en los hombres. Los
resultados de investigacin aparecidos despus de la revisin
de los NIH refuerzan considerablemente la evidencia acumulada
sobre la ecacia de los preservativos contra las ITS. Aunque los
preservativos no son ecaces al 100%, la proteccin parcial
conseguida puede reducir sustancialmente la propagacin de las
ITS en las poblaciones.

References
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Public Health Reviews


King K. Holmes et al.

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

Table 1. Summary of prospective studies on effectiveness of condom use in preventing sexually transmitted diseases
published or presented since June 2000 compared with studies cited in National Institutes of Health review (1)
Study

Design

Participants

Denition of condom use

Notes on estimates

Community-based
randomized trial of mass
treatment for STIs in
rural Rakai, Uganda,
with follow-up every 10
months for 30 months

9536 women and 7728


men aged 1559 years
in 56 communities

Consistent condom use


versus never use

Poisson regression model


with covariates for demographic characteristics
and behavioural risk

Meta-analysis of
condom effectiveness
in reducing heterosexual
transmission based on
studies in several
countries

14 longitudinal studies of
serodiscordant couples

Consistent condom use


versus never use

Point estimate is the IRR f


of always-users in 13
studies to never-users in
5 studies that were the
largest homogeneous
group of studies. Range
of estimates is best-case
and worst-case scenarios
rather than CIg s

25 studies of
serodiscordant couples,
including 13 crosssectional studies and 12
longitudinal studies

As Weller & Davis above

Point estimate is the IRR h


of always-users in 12
longitudinal studies to
never-users in 7
longitudinal studies that
specied direction of
transmission. Range
of estimates is best-case
and worst-case scenarios
rather than CIs

As Weller & Davis


(3) above

9 studies of
serodiscordant couples

Consistent condom use


versus inconsistent use
or no use

Point estimate is RR for


always-users to
inconsistent-users or
non-users for all 9
studies

Randomized, doubleblind, placebocontrolled trial of


candidate HSV-2
vaccine in USA with
11 follow-up visits over
18 months

528 monogamous
couples serodiscordant
for HSV-2, including
267 couples with
seronegative women
and 261 couples with
seronegative men

Condom use in more than


25% of sexual acts
between follow-up visits

Estimates adjust for


covariates

Candidate HSV-2 vaccine


trial in USA with 18
months of follow-up

1862 HSV-2 susceptible


people with 4 sexual
partners or 1 STD in
the past year

Condom use in more than


65% of sexual acts

Complete data not yet


published

Prospective study of
condom promotion and
improved STI services
at two clinics in Lima,
Peru, with monthly
follow-up for 6 months

917 female sex workers


who attended the clinics

Participants who always


used condoms with clients
during the previous month
versus all others

GEE i model. Covariates


differ across infections
Published OR j and P-values
were used to derive 95%
CI. For gonorrhoea, the
P-value (<0.001) was
not exact, so the actual
CI is shorter than the
one reported in Fig.1

Prospective study of a
behavioural intervention
to promote use of the
female condom in USA
with follow-up every 4
weeks for 6 months

920 females who attended


public STI clinics

Consistent use of male


condoms or female condoms between follow-up
visits with no problems
reported versus condom
use in 50 % of sex acts

Outcome was incidence


of gonorrhoea,
chlamydial infection, or
syphilis. Complete data
not yet published

HIV studies
Ahmed et al.
2001 (10)

Weller & Davis


2004 (3)

HIV studies cited


in NIH report (1)
Davis & Weller
As Weller & Davis
1999 (2)
(3) above

Pinkerton and
Abramson (11)

HSV-2b studies
Wald et al.
2001 (12)

Wald et al.,
unpublished
data, 2002
Bacterial and
parasitic STIs
Sanchez et al.
2003 (13)

Macaluso et al.,
unpublished
data, 2000

Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)

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Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

King K. Holmes et al.

(Table 1, cont.)
Study

Design

Participants

Denition of condom use

Notes on estimates

Crosby et al.
2003 (14)

Randomized controlled
trial of an HIV prevention programme in USA
with follow-up visit after
6 months

380 sexually active


African-American females
aged 1418 years recruited
from medical clinics and
high schools

Consistent condom use


versus non-consistent use

Outcome was incidence


of gonorrhoea, chlamydial
infection, or trichomoniasis.
Estimates adjusted for
covariates. The OR presented in Fig. 1 is the
inverse of the results reported in Crosby et al. (14)

Ahmed et al.
2001 (10)

See entry under HIV


above

See entry under HIV above

See entry under HIV above

GEE model adjusted for


covariates

Prospective cohort study


to estimate the risk of
transmission of
gonorrhoea from infected
females to males at a
port in the western Pacic

527 male American sailors


who had sexual relations
with commercial sex
workers during a four-day
shore leave

Condom use sometimes or


always versus non-use

Published data and P-value


were used to derive a CI
for the OR based on an
exact procedure

Cates & Holmes


1996 (5)

Reanalysis of Hooper et
al.s 1978 data that estimated the risk of acquisition of gonorrhoea or
nongonococcal urethritis

As in Hooper et al.
(4) above

As in Hooper et al. above

Published data and P-value


were used to derive a CI
for the OR based on an
exact procedure

Bunnell et al.
1999 (15)

Prospective cohort study


to assess the prevalence
and incidence of STIs
among adolescents in
USA with one follow-up
visit after 6 months

484 sexually active


African-American females
aged 1419 years
recruited from four
health clinics

Consistent condom use


reported at both baseline
and follow-up (i.e. always
used condom for birth
control and with main
partner) versus all others

Outcome was incident


STIs, including gonorrhoea,
chlamydial infection,
trichomoniasis, syphilis,
hepatitis B, and HSV-2.
Estimates adjusted for
covariates

Zenilman et al.
1995 (16)

Prospective cohort study


to validate self-reported
condom use in USA with
one follow-up visit after
3 months

275 female patients and


323 male patients at two
public STI clinics

Consistent condom use in


30 days before follow-up
visit versus never use

Outcome was incident


gonorrhoea, chlamydial
infection, syphilis, or
trichomoniasis. Estimates
adjusted for covariates

Meta-analysis of
condom effectiveness in
preventing HPV or HPVrelated conditions
(genital warts, CINd,
ICC e) in studies in several
countries

20 studies, of which only


two were prospective:
Ho et al. 1998 (17) and
Zondervan et al. 1996
(18). These are included
in Fig. 1

Ho: Consistent use versus


never use

Ho: Outcome was cervical


HPV DNA. Investigators
provided additional data
for meta-analysis.
Estimates adjusted for
covariates

Zondervan: Ever use condoms for family planning


versus never use

Zondervan: Outcomes
were dysplasia (which
probably refers to mild SIL),
carcinoma in situ (which
refers to CIN) and ICC.
Estimates adjusted
for covariates

Prospective study to
estimate cumulative
incidence of HPV in USA
with follow-up every 4
months for 3 years

444 female university


students aged 1820
years who tested negative
for HPV DNA at baseline

Condom use always with


new partners versus never
use with new partners

Estimates adjusted for


covariates

Bacterial and
parasitic STIs
cited in NIH
report (1)
Hooper et al.
1978 (4)

HPV c studies
Manhart &
Koutsky 2002
(22)

Winer et al.
2003 (19)

Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)

Public Health Reviews


King K. Holmes et al.

Effectiveness of condoms in preventing STIs

(Table 1, cont.)
Study

Design

Participants

Denition of condom use

Notes on estimates

Hogewoning
et al. 2003
(20)

Randomized clinical trial


of condom effectiveness
in the Netherlands with
follow-up at 3, 6, 12, 18
and 24 months

135 women with CIN who


were not using condoms
for birth control at
baseline were randomly
allocated. Outcomes were
assessed for 125 women

Assigned to use condoms


or not to use them

Outcomes were clinical


regression of CIN and
clearance of HPV.
Estimates adjusted for
covariates. Published HR k
of the probability of healing
was inverted to show the
effect of condoms in
reducing the probability
of not healing

Bleeker et al.
2003 (21)

As Hogewoning et al.
(20) above

100 men who were


partners of the women in
Hogewoning et al. and
who had penile lesions
were assessed for
outcomes

As Hogewoning et al. above

Estimates adjusted for


covariates. Published HR
of the probability of
regression was inverted
to show the effect of
condoms in reducing the
probability of not
regressing

a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k

HIV = human immunodeciency virus; STIs = sexually transmitted infections.


HSV-2 = herpes simplex virus type 2.
HPV = human papillomavirus.
CIN = cervical intraepithelial neoplasia.
ICC = invasive cervical cancer.
IRR = incidence rate ratio.
CI = condence interval.
RR = relative risk.
GEE = generalized estimating equation.
OR = odds ratio.
HR = hazard ratio.

Bulletin of the World Health Organization | June 2004, 82 (6)