Tight Pants and Pubic-Hair Removal Increase Risk of Vulvodynia.
Vulvodynia is a condition characterized by chronic, debilitating vulva pain. It affects an estimated 16 percent of women over their lifetimes, but very little is known about the condition or what might cause it.
Now, a School of Public Health study led by students offers some clues, finding that the risk of vulvodynia is nearly doubled by wearing tight-fitting jeans or pants four or more times a week, or removing hair from the mons pubis.
Published in the Journal of Lower Genital Tract Disease, it is the first study to show a link between clothing and grooming and the condition.
“With an increase in the prevalence of pubic hair removal directly from the vulvar region, particularly in adolescent girls, the microabrasions to this sensitive area may predispose young women to immune-inflammatory complications,” says study senior author Bernard Harlow, professor of epidemiology. “Likewise, tight-fitting jeans or pants can create an environment that fosters genital tract infections, which have been shown to be associated with vulvar pain onset.”
The researchers used data from a previous study that identified 213 women between the ages of 18 and 40 with clinically-confirmed cases of vulvodynia in a large healthcare network in the Minneapolis/Saint Paul metropolitan area. For the new study, the researchers analyzed the self-reported histories of personal hygiene behaviors a year before first reported onset of vulvar pain among this group of women, and a similar time period among 221 women from the same healthcare network and age range with no history of vulvar discomfort.
They found that women who wore tight-fitting jeans or pants four or more times per week had twice the odds of vulvodynia compared to women who never or rarely did. Roughly 70 percent of the women in both groups reported removing pubic hair, but those who removed hair from the mons pubis (the soft mound of skin above the genitals) were 74 percent more likely to experience vulvodynia than women who only removed hair from the bikini area. Compared with women who reported removing only bikini-area hair less than monthly, those who removed hair from the mons pubis weekly or more were nearly twice as likely to experience vulvodynia.
The study was led by three then-MPH students, for whom it was the Integrative Learning Experience—a practical-skills part of the master’s in public health (MPH) program. Getting to conduct and publish a real study as a student is rare, says Alexandra Klann (SPH’18). “It was just an incredible opportunity we were given, and we could not pass it up!”
Tanran Wang (SPH’18), now a data analyst in the Department of Epidemiology, agrees. “Getting to be involved in real research is very exciting, and it’s a great experience to transition from student to professional,” she says.
Wang says it was also a learning experience to conduct a study on a little-known condition, one she had never heard of before working with Harlow. “It’s very underdiagnosed because of the stigma attached to it,” she says. “It was important for me to know that this is a highly prevalent condition, and that there are women out there who are embarrassed to talk about it.”
Jessica Rosenberg (SPH’18), now a data analyst at Boston Medical Center, says there is a lot of work left to do to eliminate gender disparities in acute and chronic pain treatment, “but I am hopeful that this study’s findings will lead to further research into evidence-based predictors of vulvodynia, and improve physicians’ understanding of and treatment of this condition.”
Samantha Parker, assistant professor of epidemiology, was also a co-author.