| Literature DB >> 20161749 |
Adriane Martin Hilber1, Suzanna C Francis, Matthew Chersich, Pippa Scott, Shelagh Redmond, Nicole Bender, Paolo Miotti, Marleen Temmerman, Nicola Low.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intravaginal practices are commonly used by women to manage their vaginal health and sexual life. These practices could, however, affect intravaginal mucosal integrity. The objectives of this study were to examine evidence for associations between: intravaginal practices and acquisition of HIV infection; intravaginal practices and vaginal infections; and vaginal infections and HIV acquisition. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20161749 PMCID: PMC2817741 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0009119
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Simplified hypothesized pathways linking intravaginal practices and HIV.
Intravaginal practices are hypothesized to cause physical or chemical damage to vaginal epithelium. In response, changes in vaginal flora associated with bacterial vaginosis occur, or colonization by other vaginal pathogens occurs. These conditions facilitate HIV transmission. Intravaginal practices might also increase the transmission of HIV through a direct effect or other pathways. Numbers refer to the objectives of the review. Objective 1 includes the estimation of the association between intravaginal practices and HIV infection. Objective 2 estimates the association between intravaginal practices and vaginal infections. Objective 3 estimates the association between disrupted vaginal flora, bacterial vaginosis or other vaginal infections and HIV-1 acquisition.
Figure 2Flow chart of identification and selection of studies for inclusion.
Steps followed to identify relevant studies and select those eligible for inclusion in the review. Publications and studies in the box ‘Studies included’ could address multiple objectives and are included in each relevant ‘Objective’ below. EMBASE, Excerpta Medica Database; MEDLINE (Ovid), Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; CINAHL, Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; Cochrane, Cochrane Library (John Wiley); ERIC, Educational Resources Information Centre; GHL, Global Health Library; Popline, Population Information Online.
Characteristics of included studies.
| First author, publication year [reference no.] | Country | Study design | Population/setting | Number | Duration of follow up (median or woman years) | Vaginal practices described by authors | Objective number | |
| Enrolled | Follow up | |||||||
| Ghys, 2001 | Côte d'Ivoire | RCT | Sex worker STD clinic | 542 | 284 | 318 woman years | Vaginal use of herbs | 1, 3 |
| Hawes, 1996 | USA | Cohort | STD clinic attenders | 209 | 182 | 16 months (median) | Douching | 2 |
| Hester, 2003 | Zambia | Case-control | Living with HIV positive partner | Not reported | 90 | 3 months (planned) | Not measured | 3 |
| Hira, 1990 | Zambia | Cohort | University hospital, post-partum | 1720 | 634 | 12 months (planned) | ‘Dry sex’ (cloth used to remove vaginal secretions during sex) | 1 |
| Hutchinson, 2007 | USA | Cohort | Women at risk of PID | 1193 | 1166 | 36 months (median) | Douching | 2 |
| Kapiga, 2007 | Tanzania | Cohort | Women working in bars | 845 | 689 | 699 woman years | Not measured | 3 |
| Kleinschmidt, 2007 | S Africa | Cohort | Family planning clinics | 551 | 551 | 491 woman years | Not measured | 3 |
| Kumwenda, | Malawi, Zimbabwe | Cohort | Family planning or postnatal clinics | 2016 | 2016 | 2429 woman years | Not measured | 3 |
| Martin, | Kenya | Cohort | Sex worker STD clinic | 953 | 779 | 880 woman years | Vaginal cleansing: water, soap/detergent/disinfectant; vaginal drying | 3 |
| Martin, | Kenya | Cohort | Sex worker STD clinic | 953 | 657 | 621 woman years | 3 | |
| McClelland, | Kenya | Cohort | Sex worker STD clinic | 1496 | 1270 | 2877 woman years | Vaginal cleansing: water, soap/detergent/disinfectant; insertion of herbs; use of finger, cloth, douche bag | 1 |
| McClelland, | Kenya | Cohort | Sex worker STD clinic | 1579 | 1335 | 3422 woman years | Vaginal cleansing: water, soap/antiseptic; use of finger, cloth; lubricant | 3 |
| McClelland, | Kenya | RCT placebo | Sex worker STD clinic | 154 | 151 | 153 woman years | 2 | |
| Myer, | S Africa | Case-control | Cervical cancer screening trial | 5110 | 410 | 36 months | Wiping inside with water, cloth and/or fingers; sometimes soap or other cleaning agents | 1, 2, 3 |
| Myer, | S Africa | RCT | Cervical cancer screening trial | 4139 | 3570 | 4641 woman years | Cloth or fingers, alone or with water; soaps; disinfectants; vinegar; salt water; industrial detergents | 1, 3 |
| Nagot, 2007 | Burkina Faso | Cohort | Sex workers | 279 | 273 | 8.5 months (mean) | ‘Vaginal douching’ using soap and water, or other unspecified products | 2 |
| Riedner, 2006 | Tanzania | Cohort | Women working in bars | 600 | 753 | Up to 27 months | Not measured | 3 |
| Taha, 1998 | Malawi | Cohort | Antenatal clinics | 1196 | 1196 antenatal | 3.4 months (median antenatal) | Not measured | 3 |
| 1169 postnatal | 2.5 years (median postnatal) | |||||||
| van de Wijgert, | Zimbabwe | Cohort | Family planning, primary care, postnatal clinics | 169 | 169 | 6 months (median) | Any vaginal practice (finger cleansing with products other than water, wiping inside vagina >12 times past month, inserting traditional substances >4 times past month | 2 |
| van de Wijgert, | Zimbabwe | Cohort | Family planning, primary care, postnatal clinics | 169 | 169 | 6 months (median) | 2 | |
| van de Wijgert, | Uganda, Zimbabwe | Cohort | Family planning, primary care clinics | 4531 | 4531 | 22 months (mean) | Anything to dry or tighten vagina for sex, anything to clean inside vagina. If yes, prompt about products | 1 |
| van de Wijgert, | Uganda, Zimbabwe | Cohort | Family planning, primary care clinics | 4531 | 4531 | 22 months (mean) | 1, 2, 3 | |
Legend:
PID, pelvic inflammatory disease; RCT, randomized controlled trial; STD, sexually transmitted diseases.
Number of HIV negative women enrolled; number of women in analyses with at least one follow up visit, or number in case-control study.
Objective 1, associations between intravaginal practices and incident HIV; objective 2, associations between intravaginal practices and vaginal infections; objective 3, associations between vaginal infections and incident HIV infection.
Includes 1342 women from Malawi, 674 from Zimbabwe.
Publications from the same study of an open cohort of sex workers in Mombasa Kenya.
Publications from the same RCT of a cervical screening intervention in Kayelitsha, South Africa.
Publications from the same study of the effects of intravaginal practices on vaginal and cervical mucosa.
Publications from the same study of Hormonal Contraception and Risk of HIV Acquisition in Uganda (2235 women) and Zimbabwe (2296 women).
Summary effect estimates for studies reporting associations between intravaginal practices and HIV-1 (objective 1), and intravaginal practices and vaginal infections (objective 2).
| Intravaginal practice | Outcome | Unadjusted effect estimate | Adjusted effect estimate | ||||
| (Study ref.) | Summary (95% CI) | I2 | (Study ref.) | Summary (95% CI) | I2 | ||
| Any vaginal practice | HIV |
| 2.65 (0.95, 7.36) | 92.0% |
| 0.87 (0.67, 1.13) | 0.0% |
| Intravaginal cleansing | HIV |
| 1.39 (0.76, 2.54) | 76.6% |
| 1.88 (0.53, 6.69) | 83.2% |
| Insertion of substances | HIV |
| 1.47 (1.03, 2.10) | 0.0% |
| 1.09 (0.71, 1.67) | .. |
| Any vaginal practice | BV |
| 1.20 (1.09, 1.34) | 0.0% |
| 1.31 (0.87, 1.97) | 38.8% |
| Intravaginal cleansing or douchinge | BV |
| 1.20 (1.03, 1.40) | 0.0% |
| 1.12 (0.82, 1.54) | 49.2% |
Legend:
Includes: ‘anything to dry or tighten your vagina for sex’ or ‘anything to clean the inside of your vagina’ [14]; intravaginal washing with water, soap or other substances including detergents and antiseptics [15]; ‘any intravaginal practice reported’ [16]; insertion of herbs [24].
Includes: ‘anything to clean the inside of your vagina’ [14]; intravaginal washing with soap [15]; ‘any intravaginal practice reported’ [16].
Includes: ‘anything to dry or tighten your vagina for sex’ [14]; insertion of herbs [24].
Includes: ‘anything to dry or tighten your vagina for sex’ or ‘anything to clean the inside of your vagina’ [14]; ‘douching for cleanliness’ [25]; ‘douching’ [27]; ‘wiping inside the vagina with water, cloth and/or fingers and sometimes with soap or other cleaning agents as part of regular hygiene [34]; ‘vaginal douching using only soap and/or water’ [35].
Figure 3Forest plot of all reported and quantified associations between intravaginal practices and any infection.
Forest plot showing unadjusted and/or adjusted effect estimates reported in included studies, according to the infection studied as the outcome. Individual studies can be included more than once if multiple outcomes are reported. If both unadjusted and adjusted effects were reported for the same combination of practice, product and applicator, these are presented with the unadjusted effect estimate above the adjusted effect estimate. No pooled estimates are shown in this plot. Minor differences between effect estimates in the table and those in published papers are possible.
Figure 4Meta-analyses of studies reporting associations between vaginal infections and HIV, unadjusted and adjusted effect estimates.
Panel A: Bacterial vaginosis is associated with incident HIV infection. Eight studies contribute to the pooled adjusted effect estimate with little between study heterogeneity. Panel B: Trichomonas vaginalis infection is associated with incident HIV infection. Five studies contribute to the pooled adjusted effect estimate with no between study heterogeneity. Panel C: Candida or other yeast infections are not consistently associated with incident HIV infection. Two studies, with differing results contribute to the pooled adjusted effect estimate. Minor differences between effect estimates in the table and those in published papers are possible.