The findings add strength and precision to a growing body of evidence that the makeup of bacterial communities in the vagina - the vaginal microbiome - may increase or decrease HIV risk for women, depending on which bacteria are there.
The researchers from the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in the US said the results could lead to a better understanding of how biological conditions may promote infection by the virus that causes AIDS, and perhaps offer targets for future prevention research.
However, the researchers found that women carrying high concentrations of that bug had been dealt the equivalent of a bad hand. They had much higher odds - 4.6 to one - of acquiring HIV than those who did not.
The study also showed that the odds of HIV infection increased as concentrations of that bacterium increased.
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Biologists call this a "dose-dependent response" -- the more bugs, the more risk of HIV infection. Three other bacterial species had a similar dose response.
Gathering this information required a remarkable collaboration involving five of the largest studies of HIV risk carried out in Africa.
It involved intensive molecular testing of swab samples from 87 women who had acquired HIV infection and of 262 who did not, and sophisticated analysis comparing the vaginal microbial communities in each of those groups.
The results were consistent throughout Africa, and among three distinctly different groups of women at high risk of HIV infection: pregnant women, sex workers and women who were initially HIV negative but had HIV-positive male partners.
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