Pregnant women with positive antenatal syphilis serology should be discussed urgently with sexual health services
It is the responsibility of the patient’s Obstetric team to directly inform by telephone a Sexual Health doctor that a patient has positive syphilis serology.
NHS D&G screen with a combined IgM and IgG Enzyme Immunoassay (EIA). Since biological false positive results are common during pregnancy accounting for about ¼ of positive screening tests, ‘reactive results’ are not communicated to clinicians until reference laboratory confirmation is obtained.
Specimens reactive at NHS D&G using EIA screening test are forwarded to the Reference Laboratory in Edinburgh. The Reference Lab tests using different treponemal tests (TPPA) and a quantitative non treponemal test (RPR). A positive syphilis report is one which has been confirmed at the Reference Lab.
All syphilis serology results should be available within 2 weeks. A second sample should be sent to the microbiology laboratory for all patients with a positive result. Sexual Health may request this sample is taken by obstetric staff if there is expected to be a delay of more than 2 working days before the patient is seen (clinical details: urgent for reference lab, pregnant, previous positive serology).
On receipt of the referral the Sexual Health doctor will phone the patient to explain the purpose of the visit and answer any immediate questions.