Vaginal estrogen therapy is associated with increased Lactobacillus in the urine of postmenopausal women with overactive bladder symptoms

Krystal Thomas-White, Susanne Taege, Roberto Limeira, Cynthia Brincat, Cara Joyce, Evann E Hilt, Laura Mac-Daniel, Katherine A Radek, Linda Brubaker, Elizabeth R Mueller, Alan J Wolfe, Krystal Thomas-White, Susanne Taege, Roberto Limeira, Cynthia Brincat, Cara Joyce, Evann E Hilt, Laura Mac-Daniel, Katherine A Radek, Linda Brubaker, Elizabeth R Mueller, Alan J Wolfe

Abstract

Background: Previous work has shown that the vaginal microbiome decreases in Lactobacillus predominance and becomes more diverse after menopause. It has also been shown that estrogen therapy restores Lactobacillus dominance in the vagina and that topical estrogen is associated with overactive bladder symptom improvement. We now know that the bladder contains a unique microbiome and that increased bladder microbiome diversity is associated with overactive bladder. However, there is no understanding of how quickly each pelvic floor microbiome responds to estrogen or if those changes are associated with symptom improvement.

Objective: This study aimed to determine if estrogen treatment of postmenopausal women with overactive bladder decreases urobiome diversity.

Study design: We analyzed data from postmenopausal participants in 2 trials (NCT02524769 and NCT02835846) who chose vaginal estrogen as the primary overactive bladder treatment and used 0.5 g of conjugated estrogen (Premarin cream; Pfizer, New York City, NY) twice weekly for 12 weeks. Baseline and 12-week follow-up data included the Overactive Bladder questionnaire, and participants provided urine samples via catheter, vaginal swabs, perineal swabs, and voided urine samples. Microbes were detected by an enhanced culture protocol. Linear mixed models were used to estimate microbiome changes over time. Urinary antimicrobial peptide activity was assessed by a bacterial growth inhibition assay and correlated with relative abundance of members of the urobiome.

Results: In this study, 12 weeks of estrogen treatment resulted in decreased microbial diversity within the vagina (Shannon, P=.047; Richness, P=.043) but not in the other niches. A significant increase in Lactobacillus was detected in the bladder (P=.037) but not in the vagina (P=.33), perineum (P=.56), or voided urine (P=.28). The change in Lactobacillus levels in the bladder was associated with modest changes in urgency incontinence symptoms (P=.02). The relative abundance of the genus Corynebacterium correlated positively with urinary antimicrobial peptide activity after estrogen treatment.

Conclusion: Estrogen therapy may change the microbiome of different pelvic floor niches. The vagina begins to decrease in diversity, and the bladder experiences a significant increase in Lactobacillus levels; the latter is correlated with a modest improvement in the symptom severity subscale of the Overactive Bladder questionnaire.

Keywords: 16S rRNA gene sequencing; antimicrobial peptides; enhanced urine culture; estrogen; overactive bladder; urgency urinary incontinence; urinary microbiome; urinary urgency; vaginal microbiome.

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Figures

Figure 1.. Microbiota of catheterized urine (A),…
Figure 1.. Microbiota of catheterized urine (A), vaginal swabs (B), perineal swabs (C) and voided urine (D) at baseline and after 12 weeks of estrogen therapy.
Top: baseline; bottom: 12-week. Baseline data arranged according to 12-week microbiota. Figure constructed in R (version 3.5.1) with Vegan (version 2.5–5) , Cowplots (version 1.0.0) , ggplotify (version 0. 0.5), and ggplot2 (version 3.2.1) , packages.

Source: PubMed

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