| Literature DB >> 35056458 |
Abstract
Few studies have investigated the 1930s hypothesis that reproductive tract infections are risk factors for fibroid development. In our 2017 cross-sectional analysis from the Study of Environment, Lifestyle, and Fibroids (2010-2018), a large Detroit community-based cohort of 23-35 year-old African-American women with ultrasound fibroid screening, we found an inverse association between seropositivity for genital Chlamydia trachomatis (gCT) infection and fibroids. With prospective data from the cohort (standardized ultrasounds every 20 months over 5 years), we examined gCT's associations with fibroid incidence (among 1158 women fibroid-free at baseline) and growth. We computed adjusted hazard ratios (aHRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for incidence by gCT serostatus using Cox proportional hazards models. GCT's influence on growth was assessed by estimating the difference between fibroid size change for seropositive vs. seronegative between successive ultrasounds (1254 growth measures) using a linear mixed model. Growth was scaled to change over 18 months. GCT seropositivity was not associated with fibroid incidence (aHR, 1.0 95% CI: 0.79, 1.29) or growth (4.4%, 95% CI: -5.02, 14.64). The current evidence based on both biomarker gCT data, which can capture the common undiagnosed infections, and prospective ultrasound data for fibroids suggests that Chlamydia is unlikely to increase fibroid risk.Entities:
Keywords: Chlamydia trachomatis; incidence; seroprevalence; tumor growth; uterine fibroids
Year: 2021 PMID: 35056458 PMCID: PMC8780141 DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10010010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microorganisms ISSN: 2076-2607
Selected characteristics of fibroid free black women aged 23–35 years according to Chlamydia serostatus at baseline (n = 1158).
| Chlamydia Serostatus | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline Variable | No | Yes | 1158 |
| Age (years): median (IQR) | 29 (26–32) | 29 (26–32) | |
| Income | |||
| <20 K | 173 (37) | 360 (53) | 533 |
| 20–<50 K | 199 (42) | 234 (35) | 433 |
| 50 K+ | 102 (22) | 79 (12) | 181 |
| Missing ( | |||
| Education | |||
| ≤High School | 76 (16) | 193 (28) | 269 |
| >High School | 400 (84) | 488 (72) | 888 |
| Missing ( | |||
| Employed | |||
| No | 308 (65) | 384 (56) | 692 |
| Yes | 168 (35) | 296 (44) | 464 |
| Missing ( | |||
| Body Mass Index 1 | |||
| <25 | 127 (27) | 108 (16) | 235 |
| 25–29 | 90 (19) | 157 (23) | 247 |
| 30–34 | 92 (19) | 124 (18) | 216 |
| 35–40 | 76 (16) | 113 (17) | 189 |
| 40+ | 91 (19) | 180 (26) | 271 |
| Heavy Alcohol Use | |||
| No | 403 (85) | 530 (78) | 933 |
| Yes | 73 (15) | 152 (22) | 225 |
| Currently Married | |||
| No | 324 (68) | 511 (75) | 835 |
| Yes | 152 (32) | 171 (25) | 323 |
| Current Use of Oral Contraception | |||
| No | 410 (86) | 622 (91) | 1032 |
| Yes | 66 (14) | 60 (9) | 126 |
| Recent Birth | |||
| <5 years | 157 (33) | 235 (34) | 392 |
| 5+ years or no birth | 319 (67) | 447 (66) | 766 |
| Number of Births Prior to Last | |||
| 0–1 Birth | 397 (83) | 507 (74) | 904 |
| 2 Births | 57 (12) | 87 (13) | 144 |
| 3+ Births | 22 (5) | 88 (13) | 110 |
| Depo-Provera Use | |||
| No | 426 (90) | 615 (90) | 1041 |
| Yes | 50 (11) | 67 (10) | 117 |
| Age at Menarche (years) | |||
| ≤10 | 71 (15) | 125 (18) | 196 |
| Age 11 | 99 (21) | 139 (20) | 238 |
| Age 12 | 149 (31) | 174 (26) | 323 |
| Age 13 | 73 (15) | 115 (17) | 188 |
| 14+ | 84 (18) | 129 (19) | 213 |
| Current Smoker | |||
| No | 422 (89) | 514 (75) | 936 |
| Yes | 54 (11) | 168 (25) | 222 |
| Number of Sex Partners | |||
| 0–5 | 194 (42) | 145 (21) | 339 |
| 6–10 | 132 (28) | 200 (29) | 332 |
| ≥11 | 139 (30) | 335 (49) | 474 |
| Missing ( | |||
| Age at 1st Intercourse (years) | |||
| ≤4 | 92 (20) | 246 (36) | 338 |
| 15–16 | 151 (32) | 258 (38) | 409 |
| ≥17 3 | 222 (48) | 175 (26) | 397 |
| Missing ( | |||
| HSV-2 Seropositive | |||
| No | 318 (67) | 288 (42) | 606 |
| Yes | 157 (33) | 392 (58) | 549 |
| Missing ( | |||
Abbreviations: HSV-2, herpes simplex virus type 2; 1 Body mass index was calculated using clinic-measure values as weight (kg)/height (m)2; 2 The alcohol-consumption variable reflected the drinking level each woman reported for the age(s) at which she was drinking the most. Heavy drinkers were those who usually consumed six or more drinks on days when they had alcohol or who consumed four or more drinks per sitting at least 2–3 times a month. 3 Includes participants who reported never having had sex.
Genital Chlamydia serostatus and fibroid incidence among 1158 23- to 35-year-old black women with 2884 eligible follow-up visits across three follow-up intervals: hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals.
| Counts | Incident | Unadjusted | Adjusted 1 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlamydia | Women | Visits |
| % of Women | ||
| Seronegative | 476 | 1185 | 119 | 25 | 1.00 (ref) | 1.00 (ref) |
| Seropositive | 682 | 1699 | 158 | 23 | 0.9 (0.72, 1.16) | 1.0 (0.79, 1.29) |
Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval; HR, hazard ratio; 1 Adjusted for years since depo medroxyprogesterone acetate use, smoking, income, age at menarche, and recent birth and number of births prior to last birth (both anchored at the end of the interval); age is the time scale.
The association between genital Chlamydia serostatus and fibroid growth per 18 months among fibroids from 395 black women with growth data for 1254 intervals of growth.
| Chlamydia | Growth Measurements 1 | Adjusted 2 Estimated Percent Difference in Growth/18 Months (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Seronegative | 645 | |
| Seropositive | 609 | 4.4% (−5.02, 14.64) 3 |
Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval; 1 Growth is modelled as the difference in the natural log volume from 1 visit to the next visit, scaled to 18 months; 2 Adjusted for fibroid volume, fibroid number, age at the beginning of the interval, years since depo medroxyprogesterone acetate use, income, smoking, age at menarche, and number of births prior to last and recent birth anchored at the end of the interval; 3 An estimated percent growth difference of 4.4% indicates that the average growth (volume change per 18 months) for fibroids from Chlamydia seropositive women was an estimated 4.4% greater than that for fibroids from Chlamydia seronegative women.