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Q Can twice-weekly metronidazole keep recurrent BV in check?
During the entire 28-week follow-up of this study, 26 women (51%) in the group receiving twice-weekly 0.75% metronidazole, 5 g intravaginally, had recurrent infection, compared with 33 women (75%) on placebo.
Expert Commentary
Not only is BV the most common vaginal infection in women of reproductive age, affecting 15% to 30% of nonpregnant women and roughly half of all gravidas, recurrence is a widespread problem: 33% of women have another infection within 3 months of treatment.
BV also can cause discomfort and serious reproductive tract complications, including postoperative upper genital tract infections and spontaneous preterm birth.
Until now, the usual approach to frequent recurrences of BV has been repeated short courses of treatment—often several per year. This is problematic because the drugs are expensive and “not entirely benign.”
BV diagnosis was rigorous
In this trial, BV was diagnosed using both clinical and microbiologic criteria. Clinical criteria for BV—better known as Amsel criteria—are the presence of at least 3 of the following: homogenous vaginal discharge, vaginal pH greater than 4.5, amine odor, and clue cells. The microbiologic definition of BV is based on Nugent criteria, which involves the assessment of a Gram-stained vaginal smear.
Antifungal may be needed
Women on suppressive therapy had a substantially increased frequency of vaginal candidiasis: 43.1% developed the infection, more than twice the frequency among controls. For this reason, physicians should be vigilant for candidiasis and consider suppressive therapy for it as well as BV.
Findings do not apply to gravidas
The findings of this study should not be extrapolated to a pregnant population.
Suppressive therapy is better than repeat courses
Although suppressive therapy did not eliminate recurrence, many women experienced major improvement. The increased frequency of candidiasis may warrant suppressive antifungal therapy.
In the “real world,” some providers base “diagnoses” on the symptoms reported rather than a rigorous physical exam. However, use of Amsel criteria is strongly encouraged, unless the lab is experienced in Nugent scoring of Gram-stained smears.
During the entire 28-week follow-up of this study, 26 women (51%) in the group receiving twice-weekly 0.75% metronidazole, 5 g intravaginally, had recurrent infection, compared with 33 women (75%) on placebo.
Expert Commentary
Not only is BV the most common vaginal infection in women of reproductive age, affecting 15% to 30% of nonpregnant women and roughly half of all gravidas, recurrence is a widespread problem: 33% of women have another infection within 3 months of treatment.
BV also can cause discomfort and serious reproductive tract complications, including postoperative upper genital tract infections and spontaneous preterm birth.
Until now, the usual approach to frequent recurrences of BV has been repeated short courses of treatment—often several per year. This is problematic because the drugs are expensive and “not entirely benign.”
BV diagnosis was rigorous
In this trial, BV was diagnosed using both clinical and microbiologic criteria. Clinical criteria for BV—better known as Amsel criteria—are the presence of at least 3 of the following: homogenous vaginal discharge, vaginal pH greater than 4.5, amine odor, and clue cells. The microbiologic definition of BV is based on Nugent criteria, which involves the assessment of a Gram-stained vaginal smear.
Antifungal may be needed
Women on suppressive therapy had a substantially increased frequency of vaginal candidiasis: 43.1% developed the infection, more than twice the frequency among controls. For this reason, physicians should be vigilant for candidiasis and consider suppressive therapy for it as well as BV.
Findings do not apply to gravidas
The findings of this study should not be extrapolated to a pregnant population.
Suppressive therapy is better than repeat courses
Although suppressive therapy did not eliminate recurrence, many women experienced major improvement. The increased frequency of candidiasis may warrant suppressive antifungal therapy.
In the “real world,” some providers base “diagnoses” on the symptoms reported rather than a rigorous physical exam. However, use of Amsel criteria is strongly encouraged, unless the lab is experienced in Nugent scoring of Gram-stained smears.
During the entire 28-week follow-up of this study, 26 women (51%) in the group receiving twice-weekly 0.75% metronidazole, 5 g intravaginally, had recurrent infection, compared with 33 women (75%) on placebo.
Expert Commentary
Not only is BV the most common vaginal infection in women of reproductive age, affecting 15% to 30% of nonpregnant women and roughly half of all gravidas, recurrence is a widespread problem: 33% of women have another infection within 3 months of treatment.
BV also can cause discomfort and serious reproductive tract complications, including postoperative upper genital tract infections and spontaneous preterm birth.
Until now, the usual approach to frequent recurrences of BV has been repeated short courses of treatment—often several per year. This is problematic because the drugs are expensive and “not entirely benign.”
BV diagnosis was rigorous
In this trial, BV was diagnosed using both clinical and microbiologic criteria. Clinical criteria for BV—better known as Amsel criteria—are the presence of at least 3 of the following: homogenous vaginal discharge, vaginal pH greater than 4.5, amine odor, and clue cells. The microbiologic definition of BV is based on Nugent criteria, which involves the assessment of a Gram-stained vaginal smear.
Antifungal may be needed
Women on suppressive therapy had a substantially increased frequency of vaginal candidiasis: 43.1% developed the infection, more than twice the frequency among controls. For this reason, physicians should be vigilant for candidiasis and consider suppressive therapy for it as well as BV.
Findings do not apply to gravidas
The findings of this study should not be extrapolated to a pregnant population.
Suppressive therapy is better than repeat courses
Although suppressive therapy did not eliminate recurrence, many women experienced major improvement. The increased frequency of candidiasis may warrant suppressive antifungal therapy.
In the “real world,” some providers base “diagnoses” on the symptoms reported rather than a rigorous physical exam. However, use of Amsel criteria is strongly encouraged, unless the lab is experienced in Nugent scoring of Gram-stained smears.
Meta-analysis: Bacterial vaginosis multiplies risk for preterm delivery
Objective
To evaluate bacterial vaginosis (BV) as a risk factor for preterm delivery.
Results
In early pregnancy, BV more than doubled the risk for preterm delivery.
Methods
This meta-analysis included 18 English-language reports of prospective or controlled trials involving 20,232 women. Gestational ages were less than 37 weeks; all women had intact amniotic membranes and had been screened for BV.
The outcomes were preterm delivery, spontaneous abortion, maternal or neonatal infection, and perinatal death.
Outcome
BV greatly increased risk of preterm delivery (odds ratio [OR] 2.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.54-3.12). Higher risks were calculated for women at less than 16 weeks’ gestation (OR 7.55; 95% CI, 1.8-31.65) or less than 20 weeks (OR 4.2; 95% CI, 2.11-8.39).
BV also significantly increased the risk of spontaneous abortion (OR 9.91; 95% CI, 1.99-49.34) and maternal infection (OR 2.53; 95% CI, 1.26-5.08). No significant results were found for neonatal infection or perinatal death.
Expert commentary
Preterm birth remains one of the most important problems in obstetrics. It occurs in 7% to 10% of all pregnancies in the United States and accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths and morbidity. The economic burden also is impressive: approximately $6 billion annually in additional costs for low birth weight.
Spontaneous preterm birth occurs between 24 and 37 weeks’ gestation after spontaneous labor or spontaneous rupture of membranes. It is likely multifactorial, with infection implicated as a major factor. Since the late 1970s, accumulating evidence has implicated intrauterine infection as a cause of preterm labor and preterm rupture of membranes.1
The link between BV and preterm birth. Numerous studies have demonstrated a strong and consistent association between BV and preterm birth. While some evidence indicates that BV treatment may reduce the preterm birth rate in women at high risk,2,3 BV-specific antibiotic therapy has not reduced the preterm birth rate in women with BV in the general population (see “Does metronidazole eliminate BV in asymptomatic gravidas?” page 44).4
This suggests that a subgroup of women with BV are at risk for adverse outcomes. Critical research goals are to identify the optimal treatment strategy and the subgroup in which to apply that strategy. Whether optimal treatment will consist of antimicrobial agents, immunomodulatory agents, or both, remains to be seen.
Strengths of the study. This comprehensive survey of research published from 1966 to 2003 summarized clinical trial data from an impressive total of 20,232 women. The investigators used rigorous criteria for including published data in their analyses and appropriately assessed the heterogeneity of various study designs and populations.
This study not only identifies an association between BV and preterm birth overall, but also estimates the association based on the gestational age at which BV is diagnosed, and highlights the strong association between BV and adverse pregnancy outcomes at early gestational ages—specifically, at less than 16 weeks and less than 20 weeks.
Another great strength is documentation of the relationship between BV and other adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as spontaneous abortion and maternal infection.
Weaknesses. The fact that unpublished data were not included may introduce publication bias into the design and slant findings in favor of an association with BV. The heterogeneity among included trials did not obscure the statistically significant association between BV and preterm birth, as the investigators noted; however, that heterogeneity makes any estimate of the magnitude of the association between BV and preterm birth quite crude.
Bottom line
This important meta-analysis summarizes a 20-year accumulation of literature supporting an association between BV and preterm birth. These data—along with a plethora of evidence supporting infection as an important cause of preterm delivery—underscore the importance of future studies exploring whether identifying high-risk women with BV and treating them early in pregnancy with a long course of oral therapy will play a role in preventing prematurity. Most important, however, are future trials designed to explore the mechanism by which women with BV are at risk of upper genital tract infection.
1. Goldenberg RL, Hauth JC, Andrews WW. Mechanisms of disease: intrauterine infection and preterm delivery. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:1500-1507.
2. Morales WJ, Schorr S, Albritton J. Effect of metronidazole in patients with preterm birth in preceding pregnancy and bacterial vaginosis: a placebo-controlled, double-blind study. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1994;171:345-347.
3. Hauth JC, Goldenberg RL, Andrews WW, DuBard MB, Copper RL. Reduced incidence of preterm delivery with metronidazole and erythromycin in women with bacterial vaginosis. N Engl J Med. 1995;333:1732-1736;comment: 1772-1774.
4. Carey JC, Klebanoff MA, Hauth JC, et al. Metronidazole to prevent preterm delivery in pregnant women with asymptomatic bacterial vaginosis. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Network of Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units]. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:534-540;comment: 581-583.
Objective
To evaluate bacterial vaginosis (BV) as a risk factor for preterm delivery.
Results
In early pregnancy, BV more than doubled the risk for preterm delivery.
Methods
This meta-analysis included 18 English-language reports of prospective or controlled trials involving 20,232 women. Gestational ages were less than 37 weeks; all women had intact amniotic membranes and had been screened for BV.
The outcomes were preterm delivery, spontaneous abortion, maternal or neonatal infection, and perinatal death.
Outcome
BV greatly increased risk of preterm delivery (odds ratio [OR] 2.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.54-3.12). Higher risks were calculated for women at less than 16 weeks’ gestation (OR 7.55; 95% CI, 1.8-31.65) or less than 20 weeks (OR 4.2; 95% CI, 2.11-8.39).
BV also significantly increased the risk of spontaneous abortion (OR 9.91; 95% CI, 1.99-49.34) and maternal infection (OR 2.53; 95% CI, 1.26-5.08). No significant results were found for neonatal infection or perinatal death.
Expert commentary
Preterm birth remains one of the most important problems in obstetrics. It occurs in 7% to 10% of all pregnancies in the United States and accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths and morbidity. The economic burden also is impressive: approximately $6 billion annually in additional costs for low birth weight.
Spontaneous preterm birth occurs between 24 and 37 weeks’ gestation after spontaneous labor or spontaneous rupture of membranes. It is likely multifactorial, with infection implicated as a major factor. Since the late 1970s, accumulating evidence has implicated intrauterine infection as a cause of preterm labor and preterm rupture of membranes.1
The link between BV and preterm birth. Numerous studies have demonstrated a strong and consistent association between BV and preterm birth. While some evidence indicates that BV treatment may reduce the preterm birth rate in women at high risk,2,3 BV-specific antibiotic therapy has not reduced the preterm birth rate in women with BV in the general population (see “Does metronidazole eliminate BV in asymptomatic gravidas?” page 44).4
This suggests that a subgroup of women with BV are at risk for adverse outcomes. Critical research goals are to identify the optimal treatment strategy and the subgroup in which to apply that strategy. Whether optimal treatment will consist of antimicrobial agents, immunomodulatory agents, or both, remains to be seen.
Strengths of the study. This comprehensive survey of research published from 1966 to 2003 summarized clinical trial data from an impressive total of 20,232 women. The investigators used rigorous criteria for including published data in their analyses and appropriately assessed the heterogeneity of various study designs and populations.
This study not only identifies an association between BV and preterm birth overall, but also estimates the association based on the gestational age at which BV is diagnosed, and highlights the strong association between BV and adverse pregnancy outcomes at early gestational ages—specifically, at less than 16 weeks and less than 20 weeks.
Another great strength is documentation of the relationship between BV and other adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as spontaneous abortion and maternal infection.
Weaknesses. The fact that unpublished data were not included may introduce publication bias into the design and slant findings in favor of an association with BV. The heterogeneity among included trials did not obscure the statistically significant association between BV and preterm birth, as the investigators noted; however, that heterogeneity makes any estimate of the magnitude of the association between BV and preterm birth quite crude.
Bottom line
This important meta-analysis summarizes a 20-year accumulation of literature supporting an association between BV and preterm birth. These data—along with a plethora of evidence supporting infection as an important cause of preterm delivery—underscore the importance of future studies exploring whether identifying high-risk women with BV and treating them early in pregnancy with a long course of oral therapy will play a role in preventing prematurity. Most important, however, are future trials designed to explore the mechanism by which women with BV are at risk of upper genital tract infection.
Objective
To evaluate bacterial vaginosis (BV) as a risk factor for preterm delivery.
Results
In early pregnancy, BV more than doubled the risk for preterm delivery.
Methods
This meta-analysis included 18 English-language reports of prospective or controlled trials involving 20,232 women. Gestational ages were less than 37 weeks; all women had intact amniotic membranes and had been screened for BV.
The outcomes were preterm delivery, spontaneous abortion, maternal or neonatal infection, and perinatal death.
Outcome
BV greatly increased risk of preterm delivery (odds ratio [OR] 2.19; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.54-3.12). Higher risks were calculated for women at less than 16 weeks’ gestation (OR 7.55; 95% CI, 1.8-31.65) or less than 20 weeks (OR 4.2; 95% CI, 2.11-8.39).
BV also significantly increased the risk of spontaneous abortion (OR 9.91; 95% CI, 1.99-49.34) and maternal infection (OR 2.53; 95% CI, 1.26-5.08). No significant results were found for neonatal infection or perinatal death.
Expert commentary
Preterm birth remains one of the most important problems in obstetrics. It occurs in 7% to 10% of all pregnancies in the United States and accounts for the majority of neonatal deaths and morbidity. The economic burden also is impressive: approximately $6 billion annually in additional costs for low birth weight.
Spontaneous preterm birth occurs between 24 and 37 weeks’ gestation after spontaneous labor or spontaneous rupture of membranes. It is likely multifactorial, with infection implicated as a major factor. Since the late 1970s, accumulating evidence has implicated intrauterine infection as a cause of preterm labor and preterm rupture of membranes.1
The link between BV and preterm birth. Numerous studies have demonstrated a strong and consistent association between BV and preterm birth. While some evidence indicates that BV treatment may reduce the preterm birth rate in women at high risk,2,3 BV-specific antibiotic therapy has not reduced the preterm birth rate in women with BV in the general population (see “Does metronidazole eliminate BV in asymptomatic gravidas?” page 44).4
This suggests that a subgroup of women with BV are at risk for adverse outcomes. Critical research goals are to identify the optimal treatment strategy and the subgroup in which to apply that strategy. Whether optimal treatment will consist of antimicrobial agents, immunomodulatory agents, or both, remains to be seen.
Strengths of the study. This comprehensive survey of research published from 1966 to 2003 summarized clinical trial data from an impressive total of 20,232 women. The investigators used rigorous criteria for including published data in their analyses and appropriately assessed the heterogeneity of various study designs and populations.
This study not only identifies an association between BV and preterm birth overall, but also estimates the association based on the gestational age at which BV is diagnosed, and highlights the strong association between BV and adverse pregnancy outcomes at early gestational ages—specifically, at less than 16 weeks and less than 20 weeks.
Another great strength is documentation of the relationship between BV and other adverse pregnancy outcomes, such as spontaneous abortion and maternal infection.
Weaknesses. The fact that unpublished data were not included may introduce publication bias into the design and slant findings in favor of an association with BV. The heterogeneity among included trials did not obscure the statistically significant association between BV and preterm birth, as the investigators noted; however, that heterogeneity makes any estimate of the magnitude of the association between BV and preterm birth quite crude.
Bottom line
This important meta-analysis summarizes a 20-year accumulation of literature supporting an association between BV and preterm birth. These data—along with a plethora of evidence supporting infection as an important cause of preterm delivery—underscore the importance of future studies exploring whether identifying high-risk women with BV and treating them early in pregnancy with a long course of oral therapy will play a role in preventing prematurity. Most important, however, are future trials designed to explore the mechanism by which women with BV are at risk of upper genital tract infection.
1. Goldenberg RL, Hauth JC, Andrews WW. Mechanisms of disease: intrauterine infection and preterm delivery. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:1500-1507.
2. Morales WJ, Schorr S, Albritton J. Effect of metronidazole in patients with preterm birth in preceding pregnancy and bacterial vaginosis: a placebo-controlled, double-blind study. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1994;171:345-347.
3. Hauth JC, Goldenberg RL, Andrews WW, DuBard MB, Copper RL. Reduced incidence of preterm delivery with metronidazole and erythromycin in women with bacterial vaginosis. N Engl J Med. 1995;333:1732-1736;comment: 1772-1774.
4. Carey JC, Klebanoff MA, Hauth JC, et al. Metronidazole to prevent preterm delivery in pregnant women with asymptomatic bacterial vaginosis. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Network of Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units]. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:534-540;comment: 581-583.
1. Goldenberg RL, Hauth JC, Andrews WW. Mechanisms of disease: intrauterine infection and preterm delivery. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:1500-1507.
2. Morales WJ, Schorr S, Albritton J. Effect of metronidazole in patients with preterm birth in preceding pregnancy and bacterial vaginosis: a placebo-controlled, double-blind study. Am J Obstet Gynecol. 1994;171:345-347.
3. Hauth JC, Goldenberg RL, Andrews WW, DuBard MB, Copper RL. Reduced incidence of preterm delivery with metronidazole and erythromycin in women with bacterial vaginosis. N Engl J Med. 1995;333:1732-1736;comment: 1772-1774.
4. Carey JC, Klebanoff MA, Hauth JC, et al. Metronidazole to prevent preterm delivery in pregnant women with asymptomatic bacterial vaginosis. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Network of Maternal-Fetal Medicine Units]. N Engl J Med. 2000;342:534-540;comment: 581-583.