Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Association Between Vaginal Douching and Acute Pelvic Inflammatory Disease

160

Citations

16

References

1990

Year

TLDR

The study compared vaginal douching habits of 100 pelvic inflammatory disease patients with 762 random controls and 119 internal controls, defined current douching as any douching within the previous 2 months, and used logistic regression to adjust for confounders. Current douching was more common among pelvic inflammatory disease patients, with higher frequency increasing risk (e.g., 3+ times/month associated with 3.6‑fold higher odds), and the association persisted after adjustment, indicating douching may be a risk factor. JAMA 1990;263:1936‑1941.

Abstract

The vaginal douching habits of 100 consecutive municipal hospital patients with verified pelvic inflammatory disease (cases) were compared with those of 762 randomly selected controls (random controls) and 119 women thought to have pelvic inflammatory disease but in whom the diagnosis was not confirmed by laparoscopy and/or endometrial biopsy specimen (internal controls). Because patients had been symptomatic for no more than 3 weeks, current douching was arbitrarily defined as any douching during the previous 2 months. Current douching was more common among those with pelvic inflammatory disease than among random controls or internal controls. Among current douchers, pelvic inflammatory disease was significantly related to frequency of douching. For example, when cases were compared with random controls, those who douched three or more times per month were 3.6 times more likely than those who douched less than once per month to have confirmed pelvic inflammatory disease. A logistic regression model was used to adjust for demographic, behavioral, and other possible confounding variables. Even after adjustments, douching during the previous 2 months remained associated with pelvic inflammatory disease. These data suggest that among these women vaginal douching may be a risk factor for pelvic inflammatory disease. (<i>JAMA</i>. 1990;263:1936-1941)

References

YearCitations

Page 1