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Racioethnic diversity in the dynamics of the vaginal microbiome during pregnancy

Authors :
Robert A. Duckworth
Nihar U. Sheth
Vishal N. Koparde
Molly R. Dickinson
Jerome F. Strauss
Kimberly K. Jefferson
David J. Edwards
J. Paul Brooks
Craig E. Rubens
Michael G. Gravett
Steven P. Bradley
Donald O. Chaffin
Ana M. Lara
Philippe H. Girerd
Ekaterina Smirnova
Andrey V. Matveyev
Amber L. Sexton
Joseph Khoury
Bernice Huang
Stephen S. Fong
Laahirie Edupuganti
Sophonie Jean
Jennifer I. Drake
Nicole R. Jimenez
Myrna G. Serrano
Hardik I. Parikh
Abigail L. Glascock
Gregory A. Buck
Jennifer M. Fettweis
Stephany C. Vivadelli
N. Romesh Wijesooriya
Sarah Milton
Sarah K. Rozycki
Yahya Bokhari
Jamie L. Brooks
Ping Xu
Jie Xu
Tom Arodz
Karen D. Hendricks-Muñoz
Shreni D. Mistry
Vladimir Lee
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The microbiome of the female reproductive tract has implications for women’s reproductive health. We examined the vaginal microbiome in two cohorts of women who experienced normal term births: a cross-sectionally sampled cohort of 613 pregnant and 1,969 non-pregnant women, focusing on 300 pregnant and 300 non-pregnant women of African, Hispanic or European ancestry case-matched for race, gestational age and household income; and a longitudinally sampled cohort of 90 pregnant women of African or non-African ancestry. In these women, the vaginal microbiome shifted during pregnancy toward Lactobacillus-dominated profiles at the expense of taxa often associated with vaginal dysbiosis. The shifts occurred early in pregnancy, followed predictable patterns, were associated with simplification of the metabolic capacity of the microbiome and were significant only in women of African or Hispanic ancestry. Both genomic and environmental factors are likely contributors to these trends, with socioeconomic status as a likely environmental influence. Ancestry and socioeconomic factors influence predictable changes in the vaginal microbiome that occur early in pregnancy in women who experience normal term birth.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6c73328a16eb9e755f98aa1f365b40a8