Optimizing Taxonomic Assignments and Community State Types for the Vaginal Microbiota in Older Women
Sarah Brown, Michael France, L Elaine Waetjen, Michelle Shardell, Rebecca Brotman, Jacques Ravel, Johanna Holm

TL;DR
This study improves tools for analyzing the vaginal microbiome in older women, revealing new microbial community types linked to menopause.
Contribution
The study introduces refined bioinformatic tools and identifies novel microbial community subtypes specific to peri- and postmenopausal women.
Findings
Species-level classification rates for older women improved from 95% to 98% with expanded databases.
Three novel sub-CSTs were identified in peri/postmenopausal women, differing in key taxa like Prevotella and Corynebacterium.
These sub-CSTs accounted for 24.3% of peri/postmenopausal samples versus 1.4% in reproductive-aged women.
Abstract
The vaginal microbiome plays a critical role in protecting urogenital health across the lifespan, yet bioinformatic tools and community state type (CST) definitions derived from 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing data have been developed using data from reproductive-age women. As a result, current classification tools may not accurately describe the microbial compositions of peri- and postmenopausal women, whose vaginal microbiota shift significantly with declining estrogen levels. To address this gap, we refined two previously published key tools, vSpeciateDB and VALENCIA, using sequencing data from N = 1924 peri/postmenopausal women aged 45-72 who were enrolled in the Study of Women Across the Nation (SWAN) and the Human Papillomavirus in Perimenopause (HIP) study. We expanded the three region-specific vSpeciateDB databases with 3,092 high-confidence sequences, adding 826, 710, and 572…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReproductive tract infections research · Gut microbiota and health · Urinary Tract Infections Management
