Bacteria in the cervix may be key to understanding premature birth
Penn Medicine News Feb 01, 2017
Penn study sheds light on potential causes of premature birth, an issue that has long kept researchers in the dark.
Depending on the specific type, bacteria in a womanÂs vagina and cervix may increase the risk of premature birth or protect against it, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Results of the study provide groundbreaking information that the authors suggest could help physicians learn how to prevent preterm birth, either by eliminating the Âbad bacteria, or increasing the Âprotective bacteria. The study was presented at the Society for Maternal–Fetal MedicineÂs annual meeting and received the March of Dimes Award for Best Abstract on Prematurity.
ÂFor the first time in 8 years, the number of pre–term babies in the United States actually increased in 2016, and unfortunately, there are underlying causes that doctors still don't understand, said lead author Michal Elovitz, MD, a professor Obstetrics & Gynecology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, director of the Maternal and Child Health Research Center at Penn, and a co–investigator for the March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at the University of Pennsylvania. ÂDecoding the causes of prematurity has been a riddle thatÂs stumped researchers and clinicians for years, but our new study is finally shedding some light on a path toward offering treatment to women we can identify as being at–risk.Â
In the study, researchers examined vaginal swabs from a sample of 2,000 pregnant women, taken at three distinct points in pregnancy, to determine the microbial colonies that were present. Analysis showed that among the many specific types of bacteria, some  such as certain bifidobacterium and lactobacillus species  actually lowered the risk of spontaneous preterm birth, while others  specifically several anaerobic bacteria  significantly increased the risk.
Elovitz says the new findings are the result of a multidisciplinary team of experts from immunology and microbiology, who came together and took a new approach to the issue, examining the cervix and vagina instead of limiting the scope of their study to the uterus, as conventional wisdom would suggest. The authors say more research is needed to confirm the findings, but if proven, it could mean treatments targeting Âbad cervical bacteria, or replenishing the Âgood bacteria could be used to prevent premature birth in the immediate future.
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Depending on the specific type, bacteria in a womanÂs vagina and cervix may increase the risk of premature birth or protect against it, according to new research from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania. Results of the study provide groundbreaking information that the authors suggest could help physicians learn how to prevent preterm birth, either by eliminating the Âbad bacteria, or increasing the Âprotective bacteria. The study was presented at the Society for Maternal–Fetal MedicineÂs annual meeting and received the March of Dimes Award for Best Abstract on Prematurity.
ÂFor the first time in 8 years, the number of pre–term babies in the United States actually increased in 2016, and unfortunately, there are underlying causes that doctors still don't understand, said lead author Michal Elovitz, MD, a professor Obstetrics & Gynecology at the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, director of the Maternal and Child Health Research Center at Penn, and a co–investigator for the March of Dimes Prematurity Research Center at the University of Pennsylvania. ÂDecoding the causes of prematurity has been a riddle thatÂs stumped researchers and clinicians for years, but our new study is finally shedding some light on a path toward offering treatment to women we can identify as being at–risk.Â
In the study, researchers examined vaginal swabs from a sample of 2,000 pregnant women, taken at three distinct points in pregnancy, to determine the microbial colonies that were present. Analysis showed that among the many specific types of bacteria, some  such as certain bifidobacterium and lactobacillus species  actually lowered the risk of spontaneous preterm birth, while others  specifically several anaerobic bacteria  significantly increased the risk.
Elovitz says the new findings are the result of a multidisciplinary team of experts from immunology and microbiology, who came together and took a new approach to the issue, examining the cervix and vagina instead of limiting the scope of their study to the uterus, as conventional wisdom would suggest. The authors say more research is needed to confirm the findings, but if proven, it could mean treatments targeting Âbad cervical bacteria, or replenishing the Âgood bacteria could be used to prevent premature birth in the immediate future.
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