Sexually Transmitted Infection Clinical Trial
Official title:
Impact of Long-Acting Progestin Contraception on the Vaginal Microbiome
Despite many years of research, controversy persists as to whether hormonal contraception
promotes HIV acquisition. A number of observational studies on depot medroxyprogesterone
acetate (DMPA) injection showed an increase in HIV risk and no evidence of increased risk
with oral contraceptive pills. There are no human studies currently published on the impact
of the levonorgestrel intrauterine device (LNG IUD) on HIV transmission risk and minimal data
on the effects of the etonogestrel subdermal implant (ESI) on risk of HIV acquisition.
Establishing whether any of these highly effective contraceptives increases the risk of HIV
infection would have far-reaching public health implications, particularly in areas of high
HIV prevalence such as sub-Saharan Africa, where injectable contraception accounts for nearly
half of contraceptive use.
Perturbations in the normal vaginal microbiota, or community of microorganisms inhabiting the
vaginal body niche, have long been known to affect the risk of transmission of HIV. Studies
have shown altered vaginal microbiota with DMPA injection and preserved vaginal microbiota
with the LNG IUD, but no studies have compared these methods head-to-head or used
culture-independent sequencing methodology. The investigators propose a prospective pilot
study to evaluate the impact of different long-acting progestin contraceptive formulations on
the vaginal microbiome. Specifically, the investigators aim to identify and compare
metagenomics profiles associated with DMPA, LNG IUD, and ESI contraceptive use by community
analysis of vaginal swab samples from women collected longitudinally after contraceptive
method initiation. The investigators hypothesize that DMPA will increase community diversity
in the vaginal microbiota, whereas the LNG IUD and ESI will not affect the balance of
microorganisms in the vagina. Women who are planning to initiate DMPA, LNG IUD, and ESI
contraception as well as controls not seeking contraception will be recruited for the study
from Boston Medical Center (BMC), a tertiary care center with a racially and
socioeconomically diverse patient population. Women will have longitudinal follow-up with
self-sampling of the vagina for sexually transmitted infection testing and metagenomics
analysis at method initiation, 2-3 months, and 6 months. Establishing the safest long-acting
progestin contraceptive alternative will promote effective contraception use and lower rates
of HIV acquisition worldwide.
Women between the ages of 18-45 initiating long-acting progestin contraception will be
enrolled at a routine office visit at the family planning clinics of each institution.
Enrollment will begin in April 2016 and will stop after 6 months to allow for longitudinal
follow-up and analyses. For this pilot study, a total of 30 long-acting progestin
contraceptive initiators with 10 subjects in each method group (DMPA, LNG IUD, ESI) and 5
age-matched, controls seeking tubal sterilization will be selected for longitudinal STI
screening and vaginal sampling for microbiome analysis.
After consent is obtained, trained staff will interview subjects using a brief
sociodemographic/habits questionnaire that includes questions on age, race, body mass index,
smoking status, history of sexually transmitted infections and yeast vaginitis, weekly
frequency of coitus, and number of lifetime sexual partners. Subjects will be instructed to
self-sample the vagina at three timepoints: 1) at method initiation, 2) 2-3 months later, and
3) 6 months later. Self-collected vaginal swab specimens will be assayed for Trichomonas
vaginalis, Chlamydia trachomatis, and Neisseria gonorrhoeae using DNA amplification in the
clinical lab. Microbiome samples collected at each timepoint will be analyzed and compared to
the initiation sample to detect longitudinal differences.
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