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You are here: Home / Retired Persons / Natalie Slopen, Sc.D. / Natalie Slopen Publications / Perceived stress and incident sexually transmitted infections in a prospective cohort

R. Turpin, R.M. Brotman, R.S. Miller, M.A. Klebanoff, X. He, and N. Slopen (2019)

Perceived stress and incident sexually transmitted infections in a prospective cohort

Annals of Epidemiology, 32:20-27.

Purpose

Psychosocial stress has been associated with susceptibility to many infectious pathogens. We evaluated the association between perceived stress and incident sexually transmitted infections (STIs; Chlamydia trachomatisNeisseria gonorrhoeae, and Trichomonas vaginalis genital infections) in a prospective study of women. Stress may increase vulnerability to STIs by suppressing immune function and altering the protective vaginal microbiota.

Methods

Using the 1999 Longitudinal Study of Vaginal Flora (n = 2439), a primarily African American cohort of women, we fitted Cox proportional hazards models to examine the association between perceived stress and incident STIs. We tested bacterial vaginosis (measured by Nugent Score) and sexual behaviors (condom use, number of partners, and partner concurrence) as mediators using VanderWeele's difference method.

Results

Baseline perceived stress was associated with incident STIs both before and after adjusting for confounders (adjusted hazard ratio = 1.015; 95% confidence interval, 1.005–1.026). Nugent score and sexual behaviors significantly mediated 21% and 65% of this adjusted association, respectively, and 78% when included together in the adjusted model.

Conclusions

This study advances understanding of the relationship between perceived stress and STIs and identifies high-risk sexual behaviors and development of bacterial vaginosis—both known risk factors for STIs—as mechanisms underlying this association.

Mental Health, Health in Social Context, Slopen, Health, Sexual Behaviors

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