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The Prevalence of Bacterial Vaginosis in the United States, 2001–2004; Associations With Symptoms, Sexual Behaviors, and Reproductive Health

732

Citations

25

References

2007

Year

TLDR

Bacterial vaginosis is a common vaginal microflora disturbance linked to increased risk of sexually transmitted infections, HIV, adverse pregnancy outcomes, and may contribute to racial disparities in these infections. The study used NHANES 2001‑2004 data, collecting self‑collected vaginal swabs from women aged 14‑49 and classifying bacterial vaginosis by Nugent score 7‑10. Overall prevalence was 29.2%, with higher rates among non‑Hispanic blacks (51.4%) and Mexican Americans (31.9%) versus non‑Hispanic whites (23.2%); BV was independently associated with race/ethnicity, number of lifetime sex partners, douching frequency, low education, and inversely with oral contraceptive use, and 84% of women with BV were asymptomatic.

Abstract

Bacterial vaginosis (BV), a disturbance of vaginal microflora, is a common cause of vaginal symptoms and is associated with an increased risk of acquisition of sexually transmitted infections, HIV, and with adverse pregnancy outcomes. We determined prevalence and associations with BV among a representative sample of women of reproductive age in the United States.Women aged 14-49 years participating in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 2001-2004 were asked to submit a self-collected vaginal swab for Gram staining. BV, determined using Nugent's score, was defined as a score of 7-10.The prevalence of BV was 29.2% (95% confidence interval 27.2%-31.3%) corresponding to 21 million women with BV; only 15.7% of the women with BV reported vaginal symptoms. Prevalence was 51.4% among non-Hispanic blacks, 31.9% among Mexican Americans, and 23.2% among non-Hispanic whites (P <0.01 for each comparison). Although BV was also associated with poverty (P <0.01), smoking (P <0.05), increasing body mass index (chi2 P <0.0001 for trend), and having had a female sex partner (P <0.005), in the multivariate model, BV only remained positively associated with race/ethnicity, increasing lifetime sex partners (chi2 P <0.001 for trend), increasing douching frequency (chi2 P for trend <0.001), low educational attainment (P <0.01), and inversely associated with current use of oral contraceptive pills (P <0.005).BV is a common condition; 84% of women with BV did not report symptoms. Because BV increases the risk of acquiring sexually transmitted infections, BV could contribute to racial disparities in these infections.

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