AI Article Synopsis

  • - Researchers studied the vaginal microbiota and cytokines in women throughout pregnancy and for a year after childbirth, finding that delivery leads to inflammation and a loss of beneficial bacteria, specifically Lactobacillus.
  • - The study noted that neither the progression of pregnancy nor the approach of labor significantly affected the vaginal microbiome, while a high level of diversity in bacteria persisted long after delivery.
  • - A previous live birth was linked to lower chances of Lactobacillus dominance during subsequent pregnancies, which indicates that childbirth alters the vaginal ecosystem, affecting women's long-term health and future pregnancies.

Article Abstract

The vaginal ecosystem is closely tied to human health and reproductive outcomes, yet its dynamics in the wake of childbirth remain poorly characterized. Here, we profile the vaginal microbiota and cytokine milieu of participants sampled longitudinally throughout pregnancy and for at least one year postpartum. We show that delivery, regardless of mode, is associated with a vaginal pro-inflammatory cytokine response and the loss of Lactobacillus dominance. By contrast, neither the progression of gestation nor the approach of labor strongly altered the vaginal ecosystem. At 9.5-months postpartum-the latest timepoint at which cytokines were assessed-elevated inflammation coincided with vaginal bacterial communities that had remained perturbed (highly diverse) from the time of delivery. Time-to-event analysis indicated a one-year postpartum probability of transitioning to Lactobacillus dominance of 49.4%. As diversity and inflammation declined during the postpartum period, dominance by L. crispatus, the quintessential health-associated commensal, failed to return: its prevalence before, immediately after, and one year after delivery was 41%, 4%, and 9%, respectively. Revisiting our pre-delivery data, we found that a prior live birth was associated with a lower odds of L. crispatus dominance in pregnant participants-an outcome modestly tempered by a longer ( > 18-month) interpregnancy interval. Our results suggest that reproductive history and childbirth in particular remodel the vaginal ecosystem and that the timing and degree of recovery from delivery may help determine the subsequent health of the woman and of future pregnancies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10338445PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-39849-9DOI Listing

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