Comparison of self-collected and physician-collected vaginal swabs for microbiome analysis

LJ Forney, P Gajer, CJ Williams… - Journal of clinical …, 2010 - Am Soc Microbiol
LJ Forney, P Gajer, CJ Williams, GM Schneider, SSK Koenig, SL McCulle, S Karlebach…
Journal of clinical microbiology, 2010Am Soc Microbiol
To our knowledge, no data are available on whether the microbial species composition and
abundance sampled with self-collected vaginal swabs are comparable to those of swabs
collected by clinicians. Twenty healthy women were recruited to the study during a routine
gynecological visit. Eligible women were between 18 and 40 years old with regular
menstrual cycles. Participants self-collected a vaginal swab using a standardized protocol
and then were examined by a physician, who collected an additional five swabs from the …
Abstract
To our knowledge, no data are available on whether the microbial species composition and abundance sampled with self-collected vaginal swabs are comparable to those of swabs collected by clinicians. Twenty healthy women were recruited to the study during a routine gynecological visit. Eligible women were between 18 and 40 years old with regular menstrual cycles. Participants self-collected a vaginal swab using a standardized protocol and then were examined by a physician, who collected an additional five swabs from the lateral wall of the mid-vagina. In this study, the self-collected and three physician-obtained swabs were analyzed and compared using terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism and sequence analyses of the 16S rRNA genes. Vaginal microbial community comparative statistical analyses of both T-RFLP and 16S rRNA gene sequence datasets revealed that self-collected vaginal swabs sampled the same microbial diversity as physician collected swabs of the mid-vagina. These findings enable large-scale, field-based studies of the vaginal microbiome.
American Society for Microbiology