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Is Mycoplasma genitaliumin in women the "new chlamydia"? A community based prospective cohort study

Is Mycoplasma genitaliumin in women the "new chlamydia"? A community based prospective cohort study
Is Mycoplasma genitaliumin in women the "new chlamydia"? A community based prospective cohort study
Background: the role of Mycoplasma genitalium in pelvic inflammatory disease is unclear. We conducted a cohort study to determine the prevalence and predictors of M. genitalium infection in female students, to explore its role in pelvic inflammatory disease and to estimate its annual incidence and persistence rate.

Methods: two thousand three hundred seventy-eight multiethnic, sexually active female students (mean age, 21 years) provided duplicate self-taken vaginal samples for a chlamydia screening trial. From this population, 2246 (94%) were followed up after 12 months and assessed for incidence of clinical pelvic inflammatory disease. In addition, 900 women (38%) returned follow-up samples via the postal service 11?32 months after recruitment. Stored samples were tested for M. genitalium.

The prevalence of M. genitalium at baseline was 3.3% (78 of 2378 women; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.6%–4.1%). Infection was more common in women reporting ⩾2 sexual partners in the previous year, those with bacterial vaginosis, women aged <18 years, women of black ethnicity, and smokers. Multiple partners and bacterial vaginosis were independent risk factors for M. genitalium (adjusted risk ratio, 2.23 [95% CI, 1.39– 3.58] and 2.54 [95% CI, 1.61–4.01], respectively). The incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease over 12 months was 3.9% (3 of 77 women) among women with M. genitalium infection, compared with 1.7% (36 of 2169 women) among those without infection (risk ratio, 2.35; 95% CI, 0.74–7.46; P=.14). Annual incidence of M. genitalium infection in 873 women without M. genitalium infection at baseline who returned samples via the postal service was 0.9% (95% CI, 0.5%–1.6%). Seven (26%; 95% CI, 9%–43%) of 27 women with M. genitalium infection at baseline remained positive after 12–21 months; genotyping results suggest that these were persistent infections.

Conclusions: M. genitalium infection is unlikely to be a major risk factor for clinical pelvic inflammatory disease in this population.
1058-4838
1160-1166
Oakeshott, Pippa
594a5a10-9ee1-44e1-b7f2-f34ea356f80a
Aghaizu, Adamma
a85d3566-19ec-4914-b103-da59932b357e
Hay, Phillip
dccae4e7-fcd1-4f8e-894e-16f0e272151b
Reid, Fiona
358b38d5-3836-476e-b968-fff76c8964a4
Kerry, Sally
2c1d1fe8-7399-4239-bd01-7ade058855df
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Simms, Ian
8ed59245-4d3d-4d52-bb31-55240c853423
Taylor?Robinson, David
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Dohn, Birthe
210598d8-6f64-46fc-8fa4-83449950a016
Jensen, Jorgen S.
2d2afd71-a0a2-4a10-8660-18e8a5b1d85e
Oakeshott, Pippa
594a5a10-9ee1-44e1-b7f2-f34ea356f80a
Aghaizu, Adamma
a85d3566-19ec-4914-b103-da59932b357e
Hay, Phillip
dccae4e7-fcd1-4f8e-894e-16f0e272151b
Reid, Fiona
358b38d5-3836-476e-b968-fff76c8964a4
Kerry, Sally
2c1d1fe8-7399-4239-bd01-7ade058855df
Atherton, Helen
9bb8932e-7bb7-4781-ab97-114613de99b1
Simms, Ian
8ed59245-4d3d-4d52-bb31-55240c853423
Taylor?Robinson, David
828906e9-d68f-40a5-8608-4ca22579fb24
Dohn, Birthe
210598d8-6f64-46fc-8fa4-83449950a016
Jensen, Jorgen S.
2d2afd71-a0a2-4a10-8660-18e8a5b1d85e

Oakeshott, Pippa, Aghaizu, Adamma, Hay, Phillip, Reid, Fiona, Kerry, Sally, Atherton, Helen, Simms, Ian, Taylor?Robinson, David, Dohn, Birthe and Jensen, Jorgen S. (2010) Is Mycoplasma genitaliumin in women the "new chlamydia"? A community based prospective cohort study. Clinical Infectious Diseases, 51 (10), 1160-1166. (doi:10.1086/656739).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the role of Mycoplasma genitalium in pelvic inflammatory disease is unclear. We conducted a cohort study to determine the prevalence and predictors of M. genitalium infection in female students, to explore its role in pelvic inflammatory disease and to estimate its annual incidence and persistence rate.

Methods: two thousand three hundred seventy-eight multiethnic, sexually active female students (mean age, 21 years) provided duplicate self-taken vaginal samples for a chlamydia screening trial. From this population, 2246 (94%) were followed up after 12 months and assessed for incidence of clinical pelvic inflammatory disease. In addition, 900 women (38%) returned follow-up samples via the postal service 11?32 months after recruitment. Stored samples were tested for M. genitalium.

The prevalence of M. genitalium at baseline was 3.3% (78 of 2378 women; 95% confidence interval [CI], 2.6%–4.1%). Infection was more common in women reporting ⩾2 sexual partners in the previous year, those with bacterial vaginosis, women aged <18 years, women of black ethnicity, and smokers. Multiple partners and bacterial vaginosis were independent risk factors for M. genitalium (adjusted risk ratio, 2.23 [95% CI, 1.39– 3.58] and 2.54 [95% CI, 1.61–4.01], respectively). The incidence of pelvic inflammatory disease over 12 months was 3.9% (3 of 77 women) among women with M. genitalium infection, compared with 1.7% (36 of 2169 women) among those without infection (risk ratio, 2.35; 95% CI, 0.74–7.46; P=.14). Annual incidence of M. genitalium infection in 873 women without M. genitalium infection at baseline who returned samples via the postal service was 0.9% (95% CI, 0.5%–1.6%). Seven (26%; 95% CI, 9%–43%) of 27 women with M. genitalium infection at baseline remained positive after 12–21 months; genotyping results suggest that these were persistent infections.

Conclusions: M. genitalium infection is unlikely to be a major risk factor for clinical pelvic inflammatory disease in this population.

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Accepted/In Press date: 23 July 2010
Published date: 15 November 2010

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 487272
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/487272
ISSN: 1058-4838
PURE UUID: b7a04c88-3e10-4c41-b456-555182ede4d4
ORCID for Helen Atherton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7072-1925

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Date deposited: 16 Feb 2024 17:15
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:18

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Contributors

Author: Pippa Oakeshott
Author: Adamma Aghaizu
Author: Phillip Hay
Author: Fiona Reid
Author: Sally Kerry
Author: Helen Atherton ORCID iD
Author: Ian Simms
Author: David Taylor?Robinson
Author: Birthe Dohn
Author: Jorgen S. Jensen

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