Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Tessandier N., Uysal I. B., Elie B., Selinger Christian, Bernat C., Boue V., Grasset S., Groc S., Rahmoun M., Reyne B., Bender N., Bonneau M., Graf C., Tribout V., Foulongne V., Ravel J., Waterboer T., Hirtz C., Bravo I. G., Reynes J., Segondy M., Murall C. L., Boulle N., Kamiya T., Alizon S. (2022). Does exposure to different menstrual products affect the vaginal environment ?. Molecular Ecology, [Early access], p. [10 p.]. ISSN 0962-1083.

Titre du document
Does exposure to different menstrual products affect the vaginal environment ?
Année de publication
2022
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000863792800001
Auteurs
Tessandier N., Uysal I. B., Elie B., Selinger Christian, Bernat C., Boue V., Grasset S., Groc S., Rahmoun M., Reyne B., Bender N., Bonneau M., Graf C., Tribout V., Foulongne V., Ravel J., Waterboer T., Hirtz C., Bravo I. G., Reynes J., Segondy M., Murall C. L., Boulle N., Kamiya T., Alizon S.
Source
Molecular Ecology, 2022, [Early access], p. [10 p.] ISSN 0962-1083
The vaginal ecosystem is a key component of women's health. It also represents an ideal system for ecologists to investigate the consequence of perturbations on species diversity and emerging properties between organizational levels. Here, we study how exposure to different types of menstrual products is linked to microbial, immunological, demographic, and behavioural measurements in a cohort of young adult women who reported using more often tampons (n = 107) or menstrual cups (n = 31). We first found that cup users were older and smoked less than tampon users. When analysing health indicators, we detected potential associations between cups use reporting and fungal genital infection. A multivariate analysis confirmed that in our cohort, reporting using cups over tampons was associated with the higher odds ratio to report a fungal genital infection diagnosis by a medical doctor within the last 3 months. We did not detect significant differences between groups in terms of their bacterial vaginal microbiota composition and found marginal differences in the level of expression of 20 cytokines. However, a multivariate analysis of these biological data identified some level of clustering based on the menstrual product type preferred (cups or tampons). These results suggest that exposure to different types of menstrual products could influence menstrual health. Larger studies and studies with a more powered setting are needed to assess the robustness of these associations and identify causal mechanisms.
Plan de classement
Sciences fondamentales / Techniques d'analyse et de recherche [020] ; Santé : généralités [050]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010086314]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010086314
Contact