Abnormal vaginal microbiome associated with vaginal mesh complications

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Abstract

Aims: To identify differences in the vaginal microbiomes of women after transvaginal mesh (TVM) surgery for pelvic organ prolapse with and without mesh-associated complications. Methods: Patients with complications were eligible as cases, patients without as controls. DNA was isolated and the V1-2 region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene was amplified and sequenced. Overall richness was quantified using Chao1. Overall diversity was expressed as Shannon diversity and screened for group differences using analysis of variance. Multivariate differences among groups were evaluated with functions from R. Results: We recruited 14 patients after mesh exposure, 5 after contraction, and 21 as controls. The average number of operational taxonomic unit was 74.79 (SD ± 63.91) for controls, 57.13 (SD ± 58.74) after exposures, and 92.42 (SD ± 50.01) after contractions. Total 89.6% of bacteria in controls, 86.4% in previous exposures, and 81.3% in contractions were classified as either Firmicutes, Proteobacteria, or Actinobacteria (P

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Veit-Rubin, N., De Tayrac, R., Cartwright, R., Franklin-Revill, L., Warembourg, S., Dunyach-Remy, C., … Khullar, V. (2019). Abnormal vaginal microbiome associated with vaginal mesh complications. Neurourology and Urodynamics, 38(8), 2255–2263. https://doi.org/10.1002/nau.24129

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