Optimising Vaginal Microbiome Profiling for Clinical Translation: A Comparative Assessment of Sample Storage Methods and a Vagina-Specific 16S rRNA Gene Database
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Vaginal microbiome composition has been linked to risk of preterm birth (PTB), a persistent global health challenge. 16S rRNA microbial profiling has identified specific vaginal community state types (CSTs) that have been associated with PTB risk. Diagnostic profiling requires standardised pre-analytical protocols. We evaluated two storage methods and validated a curated, vagina-specific 16S rRNA gene database (VagDB) to enhance annotation. Paired Copan FLOQ swabs from 22 women at high PTB risk were processed for either (a) dry/immediate freezing or (b) Amies-stabilisation/refrigeration. Amplicon sequence variants were generated via 16S rRNA gene (V4) PCR and Illumina sequencing. We assessed diversity, composition, and community state type (CST) allocation. Amies-stabilised samples yielded significantly higher DNA (p = 0.003), but this did not alter species richness, evenness, or community structure. VagDB enhanced species-level resolution. PCoA showed robust clustering by participant and CST (p < 0.001), irrespective of storage; CST concordance exceeded 90%. Routinely collected vaginal swabs in stabilisation medium with an 8–72-hour refrigeration window yields reliable data, supporting the integration of vaginal microbiome profiling into clinical PTB risk assessment.