학술논문

Association between the urogenital microbiome and surgical treatment response in women undergoing midurethral sling operation for mixed urinary incontinence
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. 226(1)
Subject
Reproductive Medicine
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Aging
Urologic Diseases
Clinical Research
Female
Humans
Lactobacillus
Microbiota
Middle Aged
Suburethral Slings
Treatment Outcome
Urinary Incontinence
Urinary Tract
Vagina
midurethral sling procedure
mixed urinary incontinence
surgical outcomes
urinary microbiome
vaginal microbiome
Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Pelvic Floor Disorders Network
Paediatrics and Reproductive Medicine
Obstetrics & Reproductive Medicine
Reproductive medicine
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe urogenital microbiome is associated with urgency and mixed urinary incontinence symptoms and differential treatment responses to pharmacotherapy for urgency urinary incontinence.ObjectiveThis study aimed to describe whether the preoperative urinary and vaginal microbiomes were associated with surgical treatment responses at 12 months after a midurethral sling operation in women with mixed urinary incontinence.Study designThis cohort study compared the preoperative microbiome compositions of urine and vaginal samples from a subset of women undergoing a midurethral sling operation in the Effects of Surgical Treatment Enhanced With Exercise for Mixed Urinary Incontinence trial (NCT01959347) and compared the microbiota in women who were surgical responders vs surgical nonresponders. Twelve-month objective response was defined as a ≥70% reduction from baseline urinary incontinence episodes on a 3-day diary. Subjective response was defined as a change from baseline in the Urogenital Distress Inventory scores. Bacterial abundance and beta diversity were assessed using 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing. The primary differential abundance analysis described predominant bacterial operational taxonomic units associated with responders vs nonresponders using unadjusted and age-adjusted linear models.ResultsObjective nonresponders (n=28) compared with responders (n=72) were older (58.5±10.7 vs 51.6±10.2 years) and more likely postmenopausal without hormone use (odds ratio, 6.4; 95% confidence interval, 1.8-22.6). Vaginal and urinary microbiota beta diversities were associated with age (P