Molecular Epidemiology of Genital Infections in Campania Region: A Retrospective Study.
Elena ScaglioneGiuseppe MantovaValeria CaturanoLuca FanascaFrancesca CarraturoFabrizio FarinaCaterina PagliaruloMariateresa VitielloChiara PagliucaPaola SalvatoreRoberta ColicchioPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
This study provides updated information on the prevalence and co-infections caused by genital microorganisms and pathogens: Mycoplasma genitalium , Mycoplasma hominis, Ureaplasma parvum , Ureaplasma urealyticum , Trichomonas vaginalis , and Gardnerella vaginalis , by retrospectively analyzing a cohort of patients living in the Naples metropolitan area, Campania region, Southern Italy. To investigate the genital infections prevalence in clinical specimens (vaginal/endocervical swabs and urines) collected from infertile asymptomatic women and men from November 2018 to December 2020, we used a multiplex real-time PCR assay. Of the 717 specimens collected, 302 (42.1%) resulted positive for at least one of the targets named above. Statistically significant differences in genital prevalence of selected microorganisms were detected in both women (62.91%) and men (37.08%). G. vaginalis and U. parvum represented the most common findings with an 80.2% and 16.9% prevalence in vaginal/endocervical swabs and first-voided urines, respectively. Prevalence of multiple infections was 18.18% and 8.19% in women and men, respectively. The most frequent association detected was the co-infection of G. vaginalis and U. parvum with 60% prevalence. Our epidemiological analysis suggests different infection patterns between genders, highlighting the need to implement a preventative screening strategy of genital infections to reduce the complications on reproductive organs.