Mehrabani Sanaz, Moori Mozhgan Hafizi, Normohammadi Morvarid, Shoja Marzieh, Eskandarzadeh Sevda, Kazemi Seyyedeh Neda, Rashidkhani Bahram, Nouri Mehran, Eslamian Ghazaleh
Nutrition and Food Security Research Center, Isfahan University of Medical Sciences, Isfahan, Iran.
Department of Midwifery, Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery, Ahvaz Branch, Islamic Azad University, Ahvaz, Iran.
J Health Popul Nutr. 2025 Feb 28;44(1):58. doi: 10.1186/s41043-025-00800-x.
The present aimed to examine the relationship between Global Diet Quality (GDQ) and Prime Diet Quality (PDQ) scores and the likelihood of bacterial vaginosis (BV) among women.
This case-control study was conducted among patients referred to a gynecological clinic in Tehran using the convenience sampling method. All the participants were examined by a gynecologist to rule out BV based on the presence of three or four of Amsel criteria. A valid semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) containing 168 food items was used to estimate participants' dietary intake. To calculate the GDQ score, 25 food groups were considered, while 21 food groups were used for the PDQ score, based on the of daily consumption (in grams). All statistical analysis were performed using SPSS, and the association between GDQ and PDQ scores and the odds of BV was evaluated using binary logistic regression.
After adjusting for age, energy intake, fat intake, BMI, physical activity, familial history of BV, pregnancy history, menstrual cycle, smoking history, and the number of sexual partners in the previous month, significant associations remained between highest tertile of GDQ total (odds ratio (OR) = 0.219, confidence interval (CI) 95%: 0.101-0.475) and positive score (OR = 0.235, CI 95%: 0.103-0.533), as well as PDQ total (OR = 0.277, CI 95%: 0.131-0.583) and healthy score (OR = 0.397, CI 95%: 0.185-0.854) with the odds of BV, compared to the first tertile.
A high diet quality, as indicated by high GDQ and PDQ scores, was associated with decreased risk of BV. These findings suggest that dietary intervention may be a viable strategy for the prevention and management of BV.
本研究旨在探讨全球饮食质量(GDQ)和优质饮食质量(PDQ)得分与女性细菌性阴道病(BV)患病可能性之间的关系。
本病例对照研究采用便利抽样法,在转诊至德黑兰一家妇科诊所的患者中进行。所有参与者均由妇科医生进行检查,根据阿姆斯勒标准中三项或四项指标的存在情况来排除BV。使用一份有效的包含168种食物的半定量食物频率问卷(FFQ)来估计参与者的饮食摄入量。为计算GDQ得分,考虑了25个食物组,而基于每日消费量(以克为单位),使用21个食物组来计算PDQ得分。所有统计分析均使用SPSS进行,并使用二元逻辑回归评估GDQ和PDQ得分与BV患病几率之间的关联。
在调整年龄、能量摄入、脂肪摄入、体重指数、身体活动、BV家族史、妊娠史、月经周期、吸烟史以及前一个月性伴侣数量后,GDQ总分最高三分位数(比值比(OR)=0.219,95%置信区间(CI):0.101 - 0.475)和阳性得分(OR = 0.235,CI 95%:0.103 - 0.533),以及PDQ总分(OR = 0.277,CI 95%:0.131 - 0.583)和健康得分(OR = 0.397,CI 95%:0.185 - 0.854)与BV患病几率之间仍存在显著关联,与最低三分位数相比。
高GDQ和PDQ得分所表明的高饮食质量与BV风险降低相关。这些发现表明饮食干预可能是预防和管理BV的可行策略。