Verstraelen Hans, Verhelst Rita, Claeys Geert, De Backer Ellen, Temmerman Marleen, Vaneechoutte Mario
Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.
BMC Microbiol. 2009 Jun 2;9:116. doi: 10.1186/1471-2180-9-116.
Despite their antimicrobial potential, vaginal lactobacilli often fail to retain dominance, resulting in overgrowth of the vagina by other bacteria, as observed with bacterial vaginosis. It remains elusive however to what extent interindividual differences in vaginal Lactobacillus community composition determine the stability of this microflora. In a prospective cohort of pregnant women we studied the stability of the normal vaginal microflora (assessed on Gram stain) as a function of the presence of the vaginal Lactobacillus index species (determined through culture and molecular analysis with tRFLP).
From 100 consecutive Caucasian women vaginal swabs were obtained at mean gestational ages of 8.6 (SD 1.4), 21.2 (SD 1.3), and 32.4 (SD 1.7) weeks, respectively. Based on Gram stain, 77 women had normal or Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microflora (VMF) during the first trimester, of which 18 had grade Ia (L. crispatus cell morphotypes) VMF (23.4%), 16 grade Iab (L. crispatus and other Lactobacillus cell morphotypes) VMF (20.8%), and 43 grade Ib (non-L. crispatus cell morphotypes) VMF (55.8%). Thirteen women with normal VMF at baseline, converted in the second or third trimester (16.9%) to abnormal VMF defined as VMF dominated by non-Lactobacillus bacteria. Compared to grade Ia and grade Iab VMF, grade Ib VMF were 10 times (RR = 9.49, 95% CI 1.30 - 69.40) more likely to convert from normal to abnormal VMF (p = 0.009). This was explained by the observation that normal VMF comprising L. gasseri/iners incurred a ten-fold increased risk of conversion to abnormal VMF relative to non-L. gasseri/iners VMF (RR 10.41, 95% CI 1.39-78.12, p = 0.008), whereas normal VMF comprising L. crispatus had a five-fold decreased risk of conversion to abnormal VMF relative to non-L. crispatus VMF (RR 0.20, 95% CI 0.05-0.89, p = 0.04).
The presence of different Lactobacillus species with the normal vaginal microflora is a major determinant to the stability of this microflora in pregnancy: L. crispatus promotes the stability of the normal vaginal microflora while L. gasseri and/or L. iners predispose to some extent to the occurrence of abnormal vaginal microflora.
尽管阴道乳酸杆菌具有抗菌潜力,但它们常常无法保持优势地位,导致阴道被其他细菌过度生长,如细菌性阴道病中所观察到的那样。然而,阴道乳酸杆菌群落组成的个体差异在多大程度上决定了这种微生物群的稳定性,目前仍不清楚。在一组前瞻性的孕妇队列中,我们研究了正常阴道微生物群(通过革兰氏染色评估)的稳定性与阴道乳酸杆菌指示菌种的存在(通过培养和tRFLP分子分析确定)之间的关系。
从100名连续的白人女性中分别在平均孕周8.6(标准差1.4)、21.2(标准差1.3)和32.4(标准差1.7)周时获取阴道拭子。基于革兰氏染色,77名女性在孕早期有正常或乳酸杆菌占主导的阴道微生物群(VMF),其中18名有Ia级(卷曲乳酸杆菌细胞形态型)VMF(23.4%),16名有Iab级(卷曲乳酸杆菌和其他乳酸杆菌细胞形态型)VMF(20.8%),43名有Ib级(非卷曲乳酸杆菌细胞形态型)VMF(55.8%)。13名在基线时VMF正常的女性在孕中期或孕晚期转变为异常VMF,定义为非乳酸杆菌细菌占主导的VMF(16.9%)。与Ia级和Iab级VMF相比,Ib级VMF从正常转变为异常VMF的可能性高10倍(相对危险度=9.49,95%可信区间1.30 - 69.40)(p = 0.009)。这可以通过以下观察结果来解释:与非加氏/惰性乳酸杆菌VMF相比,包含加氏/惰性乳酸杆菌的正常VMF转变为异常VMF的风险增加了10倍(相对危险度10.41,95%可信区间1.39 - 78.12,p = 0.008),而与非卷曲乳酸杆菌VMF相比,包含卷曲乳酸杆菌的正常VMF转变为异常VMF的风险降低了5倍(相对危险度0.20,95%可信区间0.05 - 0.89,p = 0.04)。
正常阴道微生物群中不同乳酸杆菌种类的存在是孕期这种微生物群稳定性的主要决定因素:卷曲乳酸杆菌促进正常阴道微生物群的稳定性,而加氏乳酸杆菌和/或惰性乳酸杆菌在一定程度上易导致异常阴道微生物群的发生。