Author/Authors :
Saadatnia, Geita Dept. of Biotechnology- Iranian Research Organization for Science and Technology (IROST), Tehran , Saremi, Aboutaleb Sarem Cell Research Center- Sarem Women’s Hospital, Tehran , Salehian, Behrouz Dept. of Endocrinology- City of Hope National Medical Center, Duarte, California , Salehian, Pirooz Pathobiology Laboratory, Tehran
Abstract :
Background and Objective: For nearly a century, it has been suspected that reproductive
tract infections play an etiologic role in uterine leiomyoma. However, no
epidemiologic study of leiomyoma has used the polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
to compare uterine tissues from cases and non-cases, and to investigate associations
between uterine leiomyoma and infections detected by PCR.
Methods: In this case-control study, 92 leiomyoma tissues from cases, and 94 myometrial
tissue from controls were screened by PCR for cytomegalovirus, Chlamydia
trachomatis, herpes simplex virus-1, 2, and human papillomavirus typed as 16/18 or
another strain. Multivariable analysis used age-adjusted logistic regression, and generalized
linear regression as appropriate.
Results: In the uterine tissues of cases and unmatched controls, the prevalence of
infection was: cytomegalovirus (32.6%, 7.4%), C. trachomatis (23.9%, 37.2%), herpes
simplex virus-1,2 (25.0%, 13.8%), human papillomavirus 16/18 (13.0%, 10.5%).
Leiomyoma was associated with cytomegalovirus (Odds Ratio (O.R.) 6.10; 95% confidence
interval (C.I.), 2.40, 15.55) and Chlamydia (O.R. 0.47; 95% C.I. 0.23, 0.97).
Likewise, the log count of leiomyoma was higher with cytomegalovirus (+0.65, 95%
C.I. +0.34, +0.95) and lower with Chlamydia (-0.71, 95% C.I. -1.12, -0.29).
Conclusion: This first application of PCR to leiomyomata and control uterine tissues
from non-cases reveals that cytomegalovirus is associated with the presence, number,
and volume of uterine leiomyoma, while C. trachomatis is inversely associated with
leiomyoma, but only in the absence of cytomegalovirus. Current findings provide preliminary
evidence that common reproductive tract infections contribute to the growth
and control of at least some cases of uterine leiomyoma.
Keywords :
Human papillomavirus , Polymerase chain reaction , Leiomyoma , Chlamydia trachomatis , Cytomegalovirus , Herpes simplex virus