The cervicovaginal microbiome of pregnant people living with HIV on antiretroviral therapy in the Democratic Republic of Congo: A Pilot Study and Global Meta-analysis.

刚果民主共和国接受抗逆转录病毒治疗的 HIV 感染孕妇的宫颈阴道微生物组:一项试点研究和全球荟萃分析

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作者:Ndlovu Kimberley S, Pavan Ricardo R, Corry Jacqueline, Gregory Ann C, Mahamed Samia, Zotova Natalia, Tabala Martine, Babakazo Pelagie, Funderburg Nicholas T, Yotebieng Marcel, Klatt Nichole R, Kwiek Jesse J, Sullivan Matthew B
Recent studies are revealing that a suboptimal cervicovaginal microbiome (CVMB), including enrichment of anaerobic bacteria associated with multiple female genital disorders, and adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes in pregnant people. Problematically, however, the majority of the available data to date are biased towards highly developed, Global North countries, leaving underrepresented populations like the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) poorly characterised. Here, we investigate the CVMB from a cohort of 82 pregnant people living with HIV (PLWH) on antiretroviral therapy (ART) from the DRC. Specifically, we explore the associations between the CVMB via 16S rRNA gene sequencing and maternal peripheral immune factors. Additionally, we compare the CVMB of PLWH-ART from DRC to publicly available CVMB data (5 studies, 1861 samples) in a meta-analysis to elucidate the impact of HIV on the CVMB. Combined, these analyses revealed differences in community structure and predicted function of the microbiota between PLWH-ART and pregnant people without HIV (PWoH). Taxonomically, the CVMB of DRC PLWH-ART were enriched for Lactobacillus iners-dominated CVMBs (53%) or a diverse, polymicrobial CVMB, i.e., bacterial vaginosis (BV) (43%). Functional predictions made from these taxa suggested that protein-coupled receptors, amino sugar and nucleotide sugar metabolism, fatty acid metabolism, and polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon degradation pathways were differentially abundant between communities. Correlation with host plasma immune factors revealed putative links between some CVMB metrics (e.g., alpha diversity and species abundance) that have been linked to adverse pregnancy and birth outcomes.

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