Crossm: Prognostic Indicators of Recurrence of Bacterial Vaginosis
Crossm: Prognostic Indicators of Recurrence of Bacterial Vaginosis
Crossm: Prognostic Indicators of Recurrence of Bacterial Vaginosis
crossm
a Division of Infectious DiseasesWayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, USA
b Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Biochemistry, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, USA
c
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, Michigan, USA
O ral metronidazole is the standard of care for treatment of bacterial vaginosis (BV)
(1) because it has broad spectrum activity against anaerobic microbes (2–5),
minimal impact on lactobacilli and facultative anaerobes (1, 6), and rarely induces
Citation Sobel JD, Kaur N, Woznicki NA, Boikov
D, Aguin T, Gill G, Akins RA. 2019. Prognostic
indicators of recurrence of bacterial vaginosis. J
acquired resistance (4). However, all metronidazole regimens result in high recurrence Clin Microbiol 57:e00227-19. https://doi.org/10
.1128/JCM.00227-19.
rates of BV, 69 to 80% within 12 months, including patients with relapse or reinfection
Editor Erik Munson, Marquette University
(7, 8). Recurrence of BV is complex and may result from a variety of mechanisms that
Copyright © 2019 American Society for
differ among individuals (1, 8–13) and has prompted numerous alternatives to metro- Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
nidazole (14–18). Predicting recurrence in individual patients with acute BV, especially Address correspondence to Jack D. Sobel,
patients with a history of recurrence, has not been addressed and has important [email protected], or Robert A. Akins,
[email protected].
implications for customizing acute and long-term maintenance therapies to break the
Received 14 February 2019
cycle of ongoing recurrence (15). Returned for modification 2 March 2019
In the present study, we demonstrate that a novel quantitative PCR (qPCR)-based Accepted 5 March 2019
test, along with LbRC (Lactobacillus Relative Composition) and Nugent scores, obtained Accepted manuscript posted online 6
March 2019
immediately after oral metronidazole therapy predict whether patients in remission Published 26 April 2019
from recurrent BV will sustain that remission or recur later.
Mean (SD)
No. of visitsb 5.6 (2.8)
Days in study, rangeb 124 (90), 17–381
pH 5.7 (0.6)
African-American 5.8 (0.3)
Caucasian 5.6 (0.5)
Nugent score 8.6 (1.6)
African-American 8.7 (1.3)
Caucasian 8.4 (1.4)
Amsel score 3.9 (0.4
African-American 3.9 (0.4
Caucasian 3.9 (0.4)
RESULTS
Patient profiles. The study enrolled 90 recurrent BV patients for a mean of 5.6
monthly visits, ranging from 2 to 11 visits, and excluded 16 from outcome classification
because they did not return after their initial visit (Table 1). BV patient mean scores at
enrollment were pH 5.7, Nugent 8.6, and Amsel 3.9. The majority of BV patients were
African-American (90%) compared to 8% Caucasian, but these groups were not signif-
icantly different in mean age, pH, and Nugent or Amsel scores at enrollment (Wilcoxon
matched-pair signed-rank tests). Patients lost to follow-up were not a biased subset of
the total cohort.
Response to treatment. After standard-of care-oral metronidazole (SOC) therapy
among 74 patients, 46 (62%) achieved at least short-term remission, and 28 (38%) were
refractory at the first follow-up visit. Among the 46 patients in initial remission, 28 (60%)
recurred at a subsequent visit, i.e., 38% of the total tracked cohort. Thus, overall
FIG 1 Flow diagram of enrollment and responses to therapy. Only patients with at least three visits in
remission after a treatment were scored as remission, excluding patients who dropped from the study
before this while in remission. Recurrent, at least one posttreatment visit in remission before recurrence;
response to metronidazole was poor; 56 of the 74 patients (76%) who were not lost to
follow-up recurred or had a refractory response (Fig. 1). The percentage of patients that
achieved long-term remission after SOC therapy (24%) was unexpectedly high, given
this cohort’s history of recurrence. The numbers of remission versus recurrent versus
refractory outcomes were not significantly different (P ⫽ 0.269), i.e., an individual
patient was approximately equally likely to respond in any of the three ways.
Diagnostic performance of BV tests. Although the purpose of the study was to
evaluate the prognostic abilities of diagnostic tests for BV, we first evaluated their
ability to correctly diagnose BV. We alternatively used Amsel, Nugent, or sBV as
reference standards, as well as each of these plus BV Blue, Affirm, pH alone, and the
LbRC scores as index tests.
Accuracies of index tests of all pooled samples relative to three reference standards
(Amsel, sBV, and Nugent) were compared (Fig. 2). For this analysis, Nugent scores 7 to
10 were categorized as positive, and Nugent scores 0 to 6 were categorized as negative.
The three reference tests were approximately equivalent for most index tests, whose
accuracy varied by ⬍5%. Amsel, pH, and Nugent scores were most accurate, ranging
from 84 to 94% accurate to their reference tests. LbRC/5 at an optimal threshold score
FIG 2 Accuracies of the index tests (x axis) relative to reference tests Amsel, sBV (symptomatic, Amsel
positive), and Nugent score. The Nugent score breakpoint as a reference test was defined as not BV if 0
to 6 and as BV if 7 to 10. Several breakpoints of Nugent scores were considered as index tests (#/#); the
first number is the upper limit considered not BV, and the second number is the lower limit considered
BV. LbRC/5 scoring is described in the text; threshold numbers following these are the maximum scores
defined as BV. wMean is the mean of all index scores per reference test, weighted by the number of
samples in each index test. Error bars indicat 95% CI. *, Significantly different from the optimal index
score per reference test; those using Amsel as the reference are compared to the Nugent 6/7 test, and
those using sBV or Nugent 6/7 as the reference tests are compared to the Amsel index tests. Comparisons
were made using the Fisher exact test (P ⬍ 0.05). Data for all patients at all visits were pooled for this
analysis.
of 1 ranged from 78 to 82% accurate, significantly lower than Amsel, pH, or Nugent
scores. BV Blue and Affirm VPIII tests were less accurate than the other standard tests
(Fig. 2).
Prognostic value of BV diagnostic tests at the posttreatment visit. Because
recurrence rates among BV patients are so high, we sought to determine whether any
of the diagnostic tests could predict subsequent recurrence of patients who initially
achieved remission following SOC therapy. For patient management, we defined
recurrence as either Amsel positive or Amsel positive plus symptoms requiring treat-
ment (sBV). Distributions of scores of individual patients at this visit (Fig. 3) showed that
only LbRC/5 scores differed significantly between patients in remission who would later
recur (R patients) versus those who would remain in remission (M patients). At this visit,
the LbRC/5 scores of patients in remission but destined to recur later were not
significantly different from the scores of patients who were refractory.
We adapted diagnostic statistics to this prognostic application; in this context a true
positive test means that a positive score of a remission patient at the posttreatment
visit (LbRC/5 ⬍ 5 or Nugent ⱖ 4) corresponds to recurrence at a later visit and,
conversely, that a true negative means that a negative score of a remission patient at
the posttreatment visit (LbRC/5 ⱖ 5 or Nugent ⬍ 4) corresponds to long-term remission
(remission for at least three subsequent visits or to the end of enrollment, whichever is
longer). It follows in this context that strong positive predictive values (PPV) mean a
positive score of a patient in remission at posttreatment strongly predicts later recur-
rence and that strong negative predictive values (NPV) strongly predict long-term
remission for a patient with a negative posttreatment score. Only the LbRC/5 and
Nugent tests had significantly different distributions of scores for predicting continued
remission versus later recurrence (P ⬍ 0.05; Table 2). LbRC/5 using an optimal break-
point of 5 had strong PPV (0.90) and useful NPV (0.74). Nugent scoring using an optimal
Nugent breakpoint of 3 to 4 had excellent PPV (0.93) but poor NPV (0.57). Similar
patterns were seen when only Amsel criteria were used to define later recurrence, but
tests had lower PPV relative to the sBV criteria. Breakpoints were optimized based on
distributions of scores in remission versus recurrent groups and on receiver operating
characteristic (ROC) analyses (Fig. 3 and Fig. S3). Vaginal pH generated nearly signifi-
cantly different distributions of remission versus recurrent outcomes (P ⫽ 0.079) but
had no predictive value.
Other than at the immediate posttreatment visit, no test was prognostic of clinical
outcome at any other visit, including the initial, pretreatment, symptomatic visit. Since
it is reasonable to suspect that vaginal bacterial compositions begin to shift in advance
of symptomatic BV, we specifically sought to determine whether scores from visits just
preceding recurrence visits were predictive of those recurrences. For 21 patients for
which data were available, the test scores for each patient at the visit preceding the
recurrence visit were compared to the mean scores of the same patient for all other
remission visits. Surprisingly, the test scores at the prerecurrence visits were not
significantly different from the mean of other visits in remission (P ⱖ 0.099, Table 3).
Collectively, these data indicate that at no specific point in time, other than
immediately after treatment, does an individual’s status, as defined by any of the
TABLE 3 Diagnostic test scores at the remission visits of recurrent and remission patientsa
Test score (SD) or P value
Category pH Amsel Nugent LbRC/5
Prerecurrent only 4.5 (0.5) 0.6 (1.2) 4.0 (3.0) 5.2 (5.9)
Not prerecurrent* 4.7 (0.6) 0.9 (1.3) 4.4 (2.6) 3.1 (3.5)
Prerecurrent vs not prerecurrent (P) 0.276 0.102 0.277 0.099
Remission† 4.4 (0.3) 0.3 (0.4) 2.0 (1.4) 8.1 (3.3)
Not prerecurrent vs remission (P) 0.251 0.564 0.002‡ ⬍0.0001‡
aResultsare presented as means (with standard deviations in parentheses) except where data are indicated
as P values. Comparisons were averaged across the visits of 21 recurrent patients when in remission,
excluding the prerecurrent visit (*), or across all remission visits of 17 remission patients (†). P values were
calculated by the Wilcoxon matched-pair signed-rank test, except where distributions were normal as noted
(‡), where they were calculated using unpaired t tests.
diagnostic tests, predict later recurrence. Despite the lack of prognostic value of visits
other than posttreatment, patients who eventually recur had higher mean Nugent
scores and lower mean LbRC/5 scores while in remission than did patients who
remained in remission (Table 3). This reflects more instability in these scores over time
in the recurrent group.
DISCUSSION
The problems faced by the clinician in managing BV patients are refractory re-
sponses and recurrence at high rates following SOC therapy. Conventional tests for
diagnosing BV are accurate, not excellent, both historically and in this study, but neither
these nor molecular tests have been vetted for their ability to predict which patients
will be refractory and which will respond initially but later recur. Having this informa-
tion when the patient first presents, or at the posttreatment visit, would enable the
generation sequencing studies may show whether there were differences in composi-
tion of this subgroup that associates with their long-term remission.
The LbRC test is essentially a molecular Nugent test, in that it measures the relative
abundance of Lactobacillus and reports whether even traces of non-Lactobacillus
species are detected. While it is adequate at diagnosing BV, it suffers from false-positive
scores because it is too sensitive to dysbiosis. The empirically optimized threshold score
for diagnosing BV was ⱕ1, approximately 50% or less Lactobacillus species; the test is
not sufficiently precise to resolve scores under 1, where the likely true diagnostic
differentiation lies. This disadvantage turns into an advantage in prognosis because the
optimized prognostic threshold LbRC score was ⱖ5, or approximately 95% Lactobacil-
lus. This explains why Nugent scores 0 to 3 did not predict remission at the posttreat-
ment visit even though Nugent scores 4 to 10 predicted recurrence. The bimodal
distribution of Nugent scores among patients who will later recur indicates that nearly
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Supplemental material for this article may be found at https://doi.org/10.1128/JCM
.00227-19.
SUPPLEMENTAL FILE 1, PDF file, 0.6 MB.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
We thank the many current and former Wayne State University undergraduates and
staff who contributed to patient and data management and sample scoring, including
Manell Aboutaleb, Naila Baydoun, Sarah Codreanu, Kay Dedicatoria, Manar Edriss,
Tamara Jebry, Michelle Hudson, Carly Malburg, Samantha Mathews, Roshan Nizamud-
din, Nasheen Nizamuddin, and Sharmi Purkayestha.
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