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Article Abstract

Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is a dysbiosis of the vaginal microbiome, characterized by the depletion of protective spp. and overgrowth of anaerobes. Artificial neural network (ANN) modeling of vaginal microbial communities offers an opportunity for early detection of incident BV (iBV). 16S rRNA gene sequencing and quantitative PCR was performed on longitudinal vaginal specimens collected from participants within 14 days of iBV or from healthy participants to calculate the inferred absolute abundance (IAA) of vaginal bacterial taxa. ANNs were trained using the IAA of vaginal taxa from 420 vaginal specimens to classify individual vaginal specimens as either pre-iBV (collected before iBV onset) or Healthy. Feature importance was assessed to understand how specific vaginal micro-organisms contributed to model predictions. ANN modeling accurately classified >97% of specimens as either pre-iBV or Healthy (sensitivity >96%, specificity >98%) using IAA of 20 vaginal taxa. Model prediction accuracy was maintained when training models using only a few key vaginal taxa. Models trained using only the top five most important features achieved an accuracy of >97%, sensitivity >92%, and specificity >99%. Model predictive accuracy was further improved by training models on specimens from white and black participants separately; using only three feature models achieved an accuracy >96%, sensitivity >91%, and specificity >91%. Feature analysis found that species and differed in how they contributed to model predictions in models trained with data stratified by race. A total of 420 vaginal specimens were analyzed, providing a robust dataset for model training and validation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12083586PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2025.05.02.25326872DOI Listing

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