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P239 Genital HSV-2 suppression is not associated with alterations in the vaginal microbiome: a one-way, cross-over study
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  1. Christine Johnston1,
  2. Amalia Magaret2,
  3. Sujatha Srinivasan3,
  4. Sean Proll1,
  5. Dana Varon1,
  6. Jeanne Marrazzo4,
  7. David Fredricks3,
  8. Anna Wald1
  1. 1University of Washington, Medicine, Seattle, USA
  2. 2University of Washington, Laboratory Medicine, Seattle, USA
  3. 3Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Vaccine and Infectious Disease Division, Seattle, USA
  4. 4University of Alabama at Birmingham, Medicine/Infectious Diseases, Birmingham, USA

Abstract

Background Women infected with herpes simplex virus type 2 (HSV-2) have increased risk of incident and refractory bacterial vaginosis (BV). We hypothesized that suppression of HSV-2 would be associated with decreased Nugent score and risk of BV.

Methods HSV-2 seropositive women with a self-reported history of BV self-collected daily vaginal and anogenital swabs for 28 days. Women then initiated valacyclovir 500 mg daily for a 2 week lead-in, followed by continued valacyclovir and self-collection of swabs for an additional 28 days. Anogenital swabs were tested for HSV DNA by PCR. Nugent score was performed on vaginal swabs (score ≥7 denoted BV). Quantitative PCR for three Lactobacillus species, Gardnerella vaginalis, Megasphaera, and BV-associated bacterium 2 was performed from DNA extracted from vaginal swabs. The primary outcome, per-participant median Nugent score at baseline compared to valacyclovir, was calculated using linear mixed models. We had 80% power to detect a 50% reduction in rate of BV on valacyclovir.

Results Forty-one women collected a median of 28 days of swabs during each study period. Thirty-three (80%) had a history of symptomatic genital HSV-2 infection, with a median of 2 self-reported recurrences in the past year (range 0–12). The genital HSV shedding rate decreased from 109 (9.7%) of 1126 days at baseline to 6 (0.05%) of 1125 days on valacyclovir (RR=0.06, 95% CI=0.02–0.13). Median Nugent score was 3.8 at baseline and 4.0 on valacyclovir (predicted change=0.26, 95% CI=-0.43–0.94). Women had BV on 343 (31.1%) of 1103 days at baseline and on 302 (27.7%) of 1091 days on valacyclovir (RR=0.90, 95% CI=0.68–1.20). Average log10 concentrations of bacterial species did not change significantly during valacyclovir treatment.

Conclusion Use of short-term valacyclovir suppression among women with HSV-2 infection did not decrease the Nugent score or risk of BV and did not change concentrations of key vaginal bacteria.

Disclosure No significant relationships.

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