Authors
Johanna Norenhag, Gabriella Edfeldt, Karin Stålberg, Fabricio Garcia, Luisa Warchavchik Hugerth, Lars Engstrand, Emma Fransson, Juan Du, Ina Schuppe-Koistinen, Matts Olovsson
Publication date
2024/5/16
Journal
Scientific Reports
Volume
14
Issue
1
Pages
11183
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group UK
Description
Alterations in the vaginal microbiota, including both species composition and functional pathways, have been associated with HPV infection and progression of dysplasia to cervical cancer. To further explore this, shotgun metagenomic sequencing was used to taxonomically and functionally characterize the vaginal microbiota of women with and without cervical dysplasia. Women with histologically verified dysplasia (n = 177; low grade dysplasia (LSIL) n = 81, high-grade dysplasia (HSIL) n = 94, cancer n = 2) were compared with healthy controls recruited from the cervical screening programme (n = 177). Women with dysplasia had a higher vaginal microbial diversity, and higher abundances of Gardnerella vaginalis, Aerococcus christensenii, Peptoniphilus lacrimalis and Fannyhessea vaginae, while healthy controls had higher relative abundance of Lactobacillus crispatus. Genes involved in e.g …