Abstract

Alterations in the vaginal bacterial flora reflect the status of various obstetric conditions and are associated with mechanisms that underlie certain pregnancy-associated complications. These changes are also a predictive biomarker for clinical outcomes of these adverse events. We examined the vaginal microbiome in samples from pregnant Japanese women with preterm labor. The microbiota composition in preterm delivery (PD) samples differed from those of control or threatened preterm delivery (TPD) samples in principal component analysis. An increase in Firmicutes and a decrease in Actinobacteria were significantly associated with PD only (both P<0.01). In the Firmicutes phylum, Lactobacillus tended to be abundant, and the abundance of L. iners and L. crispatus was especially high, whereas the L. gasseri population was low in PD samples. Longitudinal analysis showed that the abundance of L. iners decreased after commencing tocolytic treatment in TPD samples compared with before treatment, but it remained high in PD samples. The vaginal microbiome may be a useful prognostic indicator of preterm labor and a monitoring tool for tocolytic treatment to prevent preterm birth.

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