Resources

Past Presentation

The Resurgence of Syphilis and Congenital Syphilis: What Can We Do Now | November 14, 2023

Date of Presentation: November 14, 2023

Type: Past Presentation  

Audience: Clinical  

Keywords: #Bicillin  #congenital syphilis  #penicillin  #shortages  #staging  #syphilis  

In this presentation, Philana Liang, Physician Assistant with the Washington University Infectious Disease Clinic and Core Program Manager at the St. Louis STI/HIV Prevention Training Center, offers advice for timely recognition and appropriate staging and treatment in light of pending penicillin shortages. Philana reviews the current epidemiology of syphilis and congenital syphilis, discusses considerations for staging and where diagnostic mistakes are made, the latest best practices for syphilis treatment in the time of medication shortages, and provides strategies for a syndemic approach and why it may be essential to syphilis care. The one-hour Grand Rounds session included an opportunity to engage in a didactic presentation, gain insight on how I/T/U facilities may effectively integrate timely services for syphilis treatment, become part of a learning community, join an Infectious Disease ECHO program, and a new Pregnancy Care ECHO program.

Please note recording will be made available shortly following the session.

In case you haven’t already received the information below in regards to the bicillin shortage. If you are aware of clinics that do not have any supply, they can contact Pfizer and/or the CDC for assistance:

Tribal providers can call the Pfizer 1-800 number (copied below) and request bicillin b/c they have a pregnant person in need of treatment. They can also send an email to stdshortages@cdc.gov with a specific request and John Papp will connect them with Pfizer. 

Contact the Pfizer Supply Continuity Team between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m. (CT) at 1-844-646-4398 (select option 1 [Customer], then option 3) and inform them of your urgent need If the distributor has no supply and there is a risk that priority patients (pregnant people and babies with CS) may not be treated. Let CDC know if they are able or unable to help.

Recording:

Presented by:

Philana Liang, PA-C, MPH

Philana Liang, PA-C, MPH, is a Physician Assistant at the Washington University Infectious Disease Clinic and the and Core Program Manager at the St. Louis STI/HIV Prevention Training Center.

Resources Provided:

Date added: October 12, 2023