| Literature DB >> 28594946 |
Liselotte Hardy1,2, Vicky Jespers1, Irith De Baetselier2, Jozefien Buyze3, Lambert Mwambarangwe4, Viateur Musengamana4, Janneke van de Wijgert4,5, Tania Crucitti2.
Abstract
We investigated the presence, density and bacterial composition of contraceptive vaginal ring biomass and its association with the vaginal microbiome. Of 415 rings worn by 120 Rwandese women for three weeks, the biomass density was assessed with crystal violet and the bacterial composition of biomass eluates was assessed with quantitative polymerase chain reaction (qPCR). The biomass was visualised after fluorescence in situ hybridisation (FISH) and with scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The vaginal microbiome was assessed with Nugent scoring and vaginal biofilm was visualised after FISH. All vaginal rings were covered with biomass (mean optical density (OD) of 3.36; standard deviation (SD) 0.64). Lactobacilli were present on 93% of the rings, Gardnerella vaginalis on 57%, and Atopobium vaginae on 37%. The ring biomass density was associated with the concentration of A. vaginae (OD +0.03; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.01-0.05 for one log increase; p = 0.002) and of G. vaginalis (OD +0.03; (95% CI 0.01-0.05; p = 0.013). The density also correlated with Nugent score: rings worn by women with a BV Nugent score (mean OD +0.26), and intermediate score (mean OD +0.09) had a denser biomass compared to rings worn by participants with a normal score (p = 0.002). Furthermore, presence of vaginal biofilm containing G. vaginalis (p = 0.001) and A. vaginae (p = 0.005) correlated with a denser ring biomass (mean OD +0.24 and +0.22 respectively). With SEM we observed either a loose network of elongated bacteria or a dense biofilm. We found a correlation between vaginal dysbiosis and the density and composition of the ring biomass, and further research is needed to determine if these relationships are causal. As multipurpose vaginal rings to prevent pregnancy, HIV, and other sexually transmitted diseases are being developed, the potential impact of ring biomass on the vaginal microbiota and the release of active pharmaceutical ingredients should be researched in depth.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28594946 PMCID: PMC5464551 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0178324
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Vaginal microbiome of participants at time of removal of contraceptive ring: presence and absence of a vaginal biofilm with confocal laser scanning microscopy after fluorescence in situ hybridisation by species.
(53 results unavailable due to inadequate quality of samples for confocal laser scanning microscopy).
| Fluorescence microscopy characteristic (n = 362) | n (%) |
|---|---|
| All bacteria | 192 (53.0) |
| 139 (38.4) | |
| 98 (27.1) | |
| All bacteria | 170 (47.0) |
| 71 (19.6) | |
| 40 (11.0) | |
| All bacteria | 0 (0) |
| 152 (42.0) | |
| 224 (61.9) |
Fig 1Visualisation of biomass on intravaginal ring surface by confocal laser scanning microscopy after fluorescence in situ hybridisation at 400x magnification: A. Lactobacilli (Lactobacillus spp. PNA-probe Lac663 with Alex Fluor 647 in red) scattered on vaginal epithelial cells (DNA stain with 4’,6-diamidino-2-phenylindole (DAPI) in blue); B. Vaginal epithelial cells DNA stain with DAPI in blue) partially covered with bacterial biofilm (G. vaginalis specific PNA-probe Gard162 with Alexa Fluor 647 in red and A. vaginae specific PNA-probe AtoITM1 with Alexa Fluor 488 in green).
Association of the vaginal microbial status with contraceptive vaginal ring biomass.
| Risk factor | Mean change in density for a one unit change in risk factor | 95% confidence interval | p-value from regression analysis |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.002 | |||
| Normal Nugent score (0–3) | Ref | ||
| Intermediate Nugent score (4–6) | +0.09 | -0.12–0.30 | |
| Bacterial vaginosis Nugent score (7–10) | +0.26 | 0.11–0.41 | |
| +0.24 | 0.10–0.38 | 0.001 | |
| +0.10 | -0.04–0.24 | 0.147 | |
| +0.22 | 0.06–0.37 | 0.005 | |
| +0.09 | -0.05–0.24 | 0.195 | |
| +0.10 | -0.03–0.23 | 0.132 | |
| For each log10 increase of | +0.03 | 0.01–0.05 | 0.013 |
| +0.18 | 0.05–0.32 | 0.008 | |
| For each log10 increase of | +0.03 | 0.01–0.05 | 0.002 |
| -0.03 | -0.28–0.22 | 0.816 | |
| For each log10 increase of | -0.00 | -0.04–0.03 | 0.991 |
*Mixed effect regression analysis corrected for participant multiple observations (random intercept).
Fig 2Visualisation of biomass on intravaginal ring surface by scanning electron microscopy at 23x magnification.
Fig 3Visualisation of biomass on intravaginal ring surface by scanning electron microscopy at A. 1000x and B. 4000x magnification: Phenotype 1—elongated bacteria scattered on vaginal epithelial cells.
Fig 4Visualisation of biomass on intravaginal ring surface by scanning electron microscopy at A. 1000x and B. 4000x magnification: Phenotype 2—condense biofilm of bacilli on vaginal epithelial cells.