Young Marisa R, Haddad Lisa B, McKinnon Lyle, Ochieng Walter O, Rowh Marta, Gill Amanda, Ofotokun Igho, Mehta Supriya D
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, United States.
Center for Biomedical Research, Population Council, New York, NY, United States.
Front Cell Infect Microbiol. 2025 Apr 17;15:1539086. doi: 10.3389/fcimb.2025.1539086. eCollection 2025.
(TV) and bacterial vaginosis (BV) are highly prevalent vaginal infections. Both are associated with pelvic inflammatory disease and HIV acquisition and transmission, though the underlying mechanisms are incompletely understood. We characterized the effect of TV and BV infection on inflammatory markers in the vagina among reproductive-aged women in Atlanta, Georgia. Cervicovaginal lavage specimens were collected from HIV seronegative women at a baseline visit and again three months later. Eighteen individual cytokines, 17 T cell subsets, BV, and TV were measured at both timepoints. After natural log transformation, the median cytokine concentration and number of T cells were compared by infection status statistically using the Kruskal-Wallis test. A cytokine inflammation score and a T cell score were created using principal components analysis. The scores were then used as outcomes in separate linear mixed regression models with a random intercept. Sixty women had baseline data and 43 were seen for follow-up. The median age was 30 years, 78% self-reported Black race. TV and BV prevalence at the baseline visit was 15% and 37%, respectively. The concentration of 16 out of 18 cytokines differed by infection status. In multivariable modeling, neither TV nor BV were associated with cytokine score. Most CD4+ T cell subsets (7 out of 9) differed by infection status. In a multivariable model, TV infection was associated with a higher T cell score (1.54; 95%CI 0.00, 3.08). BV was not associated with a higher T cell score. Increased concentration of vaginal mucosal T cells may explain the observed association between TV infection and HIV risk.
滴虫性阴道炎(TV)和细菌性阴道病(BV)是非常常见的阴道感染。两者都与盆腔炎和艾滋病毒的感染及传播有关,尽管其潜在机制尚未完全明确。我们对佐治亚州亚特兰大市育龄妇女中TV和BV感染对阴道炎症标志物的影响进行了特征分析。在基线访视时从HIV血清阴性的女性中收集宫颈阴道灌洗标本,三个月后再次收集。在两个时间点都检测了18种细胞因子、17种T细胞亚群、BV和TV。经过自然对数转换后,使用Kruskal-Wallis检验按感染状态对细胞因子中位数浓度和T细胞数量进行统计学比较。使用主成分分析创建细胞因子炎症评分和T细胞评分。然后将这些评分用作具有随机截距的单独线性混合回归模型的结果。60名女性有基线数据,43名接受了随访。中位年龄为30岁,78%的人自我报告为黑人种族。基线访视时TV和BV的患病率分别为15%和37%。18种细胞因子中有16种的浓度因感染状态而异。在多变量建模中,TV和BV均与细胞因子评分无关。大多数CD4+T细胞亚群(9种中的7种)因感染状态而异。在多变量模型中,TV感染与较高的T细胞评分相关(1.54;95%CI 0.00,3.08)。BV与较高的T细胞评分无关。阴道黏膜T细胞浓度的增加可能解释了观察到的TV感染与艾滋病毒风险之间的关联。