| Literature DB >> 35008605 |
Salvatore Giovanni Vitale1, Federico Ferrari2, Michał Ciebiera3, Magdalena Zgliczyńska3, Agnese Maria Chiara Rapisarda1, Giada Maria Vecchio4, Alessandra Pino5,6, Giuseppe Angelico7, Anna Knafel3, Gaetano Riemma8, Pasquale De Franciscis8, Stefano Cianci9.
Abstract
The human microbiome plays a crucial role in determining the health status of every human being, and the microbiome of the genital tract can affect the fertility potential before and during assisted reproductive treatments (ARTs). This review aims to identify and appraise studies investigating the correlation of genital microbiome to infertility. Publications up to February 2021 were identified by searching the electronic databases PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus and Embase and bibliographies. Only full-text original research articles written in English were considered eligible for analysis, whereas reviews, editorials, opinions or letters, case studies, conference papers, and abstracts were excluded. Twenty-six articles were identified. The oldest studies adopted the exclusive culture-based technique, while in recent years PCR and RNA sequencing based on 16S rRNA were the most used technique. Regardless of the anatomical site under investigation, the Lactobacillus-dominated flora seems to play a pivotal role in determining fertility, and in particular Lactobacillus crispatus showed a central role. Nonetheless, the presence of pathogens in the genital tract, such as Chlamydia trachomatis, Gardnerella vaginalis, Ureaplasma species, and Gram-negative stains microorganism, affected fertility also in case of asymptomatic bacterial vaginosis (BV). We failed to identify descriptive or comparative studies regarding tubal microbiome. The microbiome of the genital tract plays a pivotal role in fertility, also in case of ARTs. The standardization of the sampling methods and investigations approaches is warranted to stratify the fertility potential and its subsequent treatment. Prospective tubal microbiome studies are warranted.Entities:
Keywords: IVF; infertility; lactobacillus; microbiome
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 35008605 PMCID: PMC8745627 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23010180
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Search strategy for used databases.
| Database | Number of Retrieved Studies | Search Strategy |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed/MEDLINE | 650 | (“Microbiota” [Mesh] OR microbiot * OR microbiom * OR microfilm * OR flora OR microflor *) AND (“Infertility” [Mesh] OR infertility OR fertility OR sterility) |
| Embase | 963 | (microbiot * OR microbiom * OR microfilm * OR ‘flora’/exp OR flora OR microflor *) AND (infertility OR fertility OR sterility) |
| Scopus | 1682 | TITLE-ABS-KEY ((microbiot * OR microbiom * OR microfilm * OR flora OR microflor *) AND (infertility OR fertility OR sterility)) |
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Synoptic overview of the articles included in the review.
| Authors | Year | Country | Aim | Basic Data on Studied Infertile Women/Couples | Specimen Type | Diagnostic Method | Data on Cultures Growth | Impact on Fertility or Infertility Treatment Outcomes | Additional Information |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hok et al. [ | 1967 | Indonesia | To examine the incidence of various bacteria in endocervical mucus obtained from the internal os of women with gynecological issues. | 112 infertile woman qualified for tubal insufflation | Endocervical mucus | Bacteria culturing | No differences between groups except higher occurrence of Mycobacterium tuberculosis in infertile patients; the growth pattern in infertile patients was as | In 3% cases of infertility, | |
| Moberg et al. [ | 1978 | Sweden | To describe the predominant cervical bacterial flora in infertile, early-pregnancy and labour patients | 47 infertile women | Cervical swabs | Bacteria culturing | Alpha-hemolytic streptococci—23% | The largest proportion of patients with both aerobic and anaerobic bacteria was found in the labour group, followed by the early pregnancy and the infertile groups. The same relation between the groups was noted for aerobic bacteria only; only anaerobic bacteria was found in 51% of infertile patients, 26% of early pregnancy and 0% in labour group | - |
| Koskimies et al. [ | 1981 | Finland | To examine the cervical factor using microbiologic, cytologic, colposcopic, and histologic investigations in a group of women with reproductive failure and clinically “inflame cervixes” | 52 infertile women | Cervical swabs and serum | Bacteria and yeast culturing and anti-chlamydial antibodies immunofluorescence | Women examined for infertility have been shown to have significantly higher levels of anti-chlamydial antibodies than the controls | No testing for | |
| Taylor & Ilesanmi et al. [ | 1995 | Nigeria | To examine the microbial flora, if any, of the endometrium of infertile women and re-appraise the value of endometrial and vaginal bacterial cultures in the assessment of the infertile woman | 73 infertile women | Endometrial biopsy | Histological examination and bacteria culturing | None of the cultures yielded any growth and the Gram stains were all negative, both for organisms and pus cells. | - | No testing for |
| Fanchini et al. [ | 1998 | France | To analyze bacteriologically the catheters used for determining cervical obstruction before ET for the presence of microorganisms and to investigate the possible consequences on the outcome of IVF-ET | 279 infertile women | Samples from ET catherer | Bacteria culturing | 51% cultures were positive—Mostly | Clinical, ongoing pregnancy and implantation rates were lower in the positive than in the negative culture group (24% vs. 37%; 17% vs. 28%; and 9% vs. 16%, respectively) | No testing for |
| Salim et al. [ | 2002 | Israel | To examine whether the nature of bacterial flora, found in the uterine cervical canal at embryo transfer, is associated with the rate of conception in assisted reproductive techniques | 204 patients who underwent embryo transfer | Cervical canal swab | Bacteria culturing | In 75 patients (37%) sterile cervical cultures or lactobacillus were recorded; No difference in colonization was found between women who underwent frozen–thawed versus fresh embryo transfer (57 and 67% respectively); | Any Gram-negative colonization was associated with no conception; From 75 sterile culture patients 31% conceived; among the 129 in whom any pathogenic micro-organism was recovered only 16% conceived | |
| Borovkova et al. [ | 2011 | Estonia | To clarify the influence of sexual intercourse on partner’s genital tract microbiota in infertile couples | 17 infertile couples | Self-collected vaginal samples taken 3–5 days later before intercourse and 8–12 h after intercourse and semen samples collected during menstruation of the partner | PCR analysis | - | After the intercourse, median 4 new species emerge in one woman and median 2 species disappear; this tendency was more prominent in the partners of IP patients | |
| Mangot-Bertrand et al. [ | 2012 | France | To assess BV prevalence for infertile patients treated by IVF and its impact on the pregnancy rate | 307 women undergoing IVF | Vaginal sampling performed with sterile cytobrush and two sterile cotton swabs | Nugent score and RT-PCR | The prevalence of BV in the whole study group was 9%; among women who performed vaginal douching—22%; whereas among patients who did not douche—8% | The embryo implantation rate does not decrease significantly between the two groups | Regarding ongoing clinical pregnancies, authors did not observe any significant difference between the two groups concerning early miscarriage rate, PROM, preterm labour, gestational age at delivery, mode of delivery or birthweight |
| Pelzer et al. [ | 2013 | United States | To test human | 263 couples | Follicular fluid samples and vaginal swabs | Culturing and PCR analysis | Microorganisms were detected within 100% of cultured vaginal swabs; | Adverse IVF outcomes were associated with microbial colonization of follicular fluid. | Microorganisms isolated from follicular fluids were classified as: (1) ‘colonizers’ if microorganisms were detected within the follicular fluid, but not in vaginal swab; or (2) ‘contaminants’ if microorganisms detected in the vagina were also detected within the follicular fluid; The authors found significant differences in the microbiome of both (left and right) ovaries |
| Campisciano et al. [ | 2016 | Italy | To compare the vaginal microbiome of idiopathic and non-idiopathic infertile as well as fertile women to identify bacterial species suitable as biomarkers | 27 infertile women attending the ART | Cervical–vaginal fluids | V3-16S rDNA sequencing | |||
| Verstraelen et al. [ | 2016 | Belgium | To investigate the putative presence of a uterine microbiome in a selected series of non-pregnant women through deep sequencing of the V1-2 hypervariable region of | 19 patients | Endometrial sample | PCR analysis | In 90% of subjects, the community was fairly similar, with different species of | ||
| Moreno et al. [ | 2016 | Spain | To test the existence of an endometrial microbiota that differs from that in the vagina and analyze the impact of the endometrial microbial community on reproductive outcome in infertile patients undergoing IVF | 35 infertile patients | Endometrial fluid | RNA sequencing | The most represented genus was | The presence of a non- | If bacterial communities from paired endometrial fluid and vaginal aspirate samples within the same subjects were interrogated, different bacterial communities were detected between the uterine cavity and the vagina of subjects |
| Haahret | 2016 | Denmark | To characterize what is the diagnostic performance of qPCR assays compared with Nugent scoring for abnormal vaginal microbiota and for predicting the success rate of IVF treatment | 130 infertile women | Vaginal swabs | Nugent’s criteria and PCR analysis | The prevalence of BV defined by Nugent score was 21%,whereas the prevalence of an abnormal vaginal microbiota was 28% defined by qPCR; there were high concentrations of | Abnormal vaginal microbiota may negatively affect the clinical pregnancy rate in IVF patients; only 9% with qPCR defined abnormal vaginal microbiota obtained a clinical pregnancy | The qPCR diagnostic approach had a sensitivity and specificity of respectively 93% and 93% for Nugent-defined BV |
| Franasiaket | 2016 | United States | To characterize the microbiome at the time of embryo transfer | 33 infertile women | Distal part of transfer catheter used for embryo transfer | 16S ribosomal subunit hypervariable region analysis with next-generation sequencing | There were a total of 278 different genus calls present across patient samples; Flavobacterium and Lactobacillus represent the majority of the bacterium seen in both groups | Lactobacillus was the most often found species for both pregnant and not; there were no differences in microbiomes between ongoing and non-ongoing pregnancy | |
| Mishra et al. [ | 2017 | India | To know the prevalence of microorganisms in the infertile couples of a tertiary caring teaching hospital | 288 infertile couples | The endocervical swabs or high vagina swabs | Bacteria and yeast culturing | 65% of women from infertile with cultures growth | - | - |
| Graspeuntner et al. [ | 2017 | Germany | To characterize the microbial pattern in females diagnosed with ININF in comparison to females with nININF, | 47 infertile women | Three swabs from the cervix and serum samples | 16S amplicon sequencing and anti-chlamydial antibodies immunobloting | Females with ININF had higher frequency of previous | Authors established a model to predict the underlying cause of infertility by using the following parameters: (1) detection of pathogens by PCR and cultivation, (2) serological status of | - |
| Babu et al. [ | 2017 | India | To compare the vaginal flora and analyse the incidence of asymptomatic vaginosis among healthy women and in women with infertility problems | 116 infertile women | Vaginal swabs | Bacteria culturing | The most dominant flora was | ||
| Tao et al. [ | 2017 | United States | To establish the validation of taxonomic identification and characterize endometrium microbiome by analyzing embryo transfer catheter tips | 70 infertile women | Distal part of transfer catheter used for embryo transfer | PCR analysis | - | The metagenomics workflow provides a rapid and sensitive method to identify bacteria in clinical embryo transfer specimens | |
| Kyono et al. [ | 2018 | Japan | To analyze the endometrial and vaginal microbiome among a Japanese infertile population and its impact on implantation | 102 infertile patients | Endometrial fluid and vaginal discharge samples collected using an intrauterine insemination catheter | PCR and pyrosequencing of V4 of the bacterial 16S rRNA genes | The | A considerable percentage of non- | |
| Wee et al. [ | 2018 | Australia | To examine the vaginal, cervical, and endometrial microbiota for women with a history of infertility compared to women with a history of fertility | 15 infertile patients | Vaginal, cervical, and endometrial samples | PCR analysis | The genus | Infertile women more often had | Tenascin-C expression correlated with a history of miscarriage |
| Koedooder et al. [ | 2019 | Netherlands | To determine if the presence or absence of certain vaginal bacteria associated with failure or success to become pregnant after an in IVF or IVF-ICSI) treatments. | 192 women undergoing IVF or IVF-ICSI treatment | Self-collected vaginal swab | Microbiome profiling with the use of interspace profiling (IS-pro) | A relatively low load of | ||
| Bernabeu et al. [ | 2019 | Spain | To investigate if the vaginal microbiome influences the IVF outcome | 31 patients undergoing ART | Vaginal samples | V3 V4 region of 16S rRNA analysis | Samples from women who achieved pregnancy showed a greater presence of | ||
| Liu et al. [ | 2019 | China | To systematically compare the endometrial microbiota in infertile women with and without chronic endometritis, as diagnosed by a quantitative and reference range-based method | 130 infertile women | Endometrial biopsy and fluid | RNA sequencing | The median relative abundance of | Chronic endometritis was associated with a higher abundance of 18 bacterial taxa in the endometrial cavity | |
| Kitaya et al. [ | 2019 | Japan | To characterize the microbiota in the endometrial fluid and vaginal secretions in women with RIF | 46 infertile patients | Vaginal swab and endometrial fluid | PCR analysis | There were no significant differences in the detection rate of the specific bacterial species in the VS microbiota between the two groups. | ||
| Cheong et al. [ | 2019 | Malaysia | To evaluate the alteration of endocervical microbiome in association with | 34 infertile women | Endocervical swabs | 16S rRNA metagenomic sequencing | A total of 40 out of 70 participants were infected with genital | 88% of the subjects from the infertile group was infected by | No significant correlation between chlamydial infection was detected with demographics such as age, marital status, as well as ethnicity |