International Journal of Biomedical Science and Travel Medicine
7-16

Phytotherapy for Bacterial Vaginosis with Piper Betle: from Mechanism to Safety

Satria Bintang Samudra (Faculty of Medicine, Hang Tuah University)
Prawesty Diah Utami (FK University Hang Tuah)
Grissabel Bethrin Jiantoro (Faculty of Medicine, Hang Tuah University)
Jessica Euodia Adidharma (Faculty of Medicine, Hang Tuah University)
Rayhan Ali Fadli (Faculty of Medicine, Hang Tuah University)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Nov -0001

Abstract

Background: Bacterial vaginosis (BV) is a prevalent vaginal dysbiosis characterized by depletion of Lactobacillus and overgrowth of anaerobic bacteria, commonly including Gardnerella vaginalis. Clinical management is complicated by high recurrence rates, which are closely linked to polymicrobial biofilm persistence and the limited microbiome selectivity of conventional antimicrobials. This narrative review aimed to synthesize current evidence on the phytotherapeutic potential of Piper betle in BV, focusing on antimicrobial and anti-biofilm mechanisms, modulation of vaginal microbiome ecology, and safety and standardization considerations relevant to translational development and recurrence prevention. Methods: An exploratory literature search (2015–2025) was conducted using PubMed/MEDLINE, ScienceDirect, and Google Scholar, complemented by manual reference screening, and last searched on 30 September 2025. Results: Findings across in vitro studies, observational reports, and mechanistic literature indicate that P. betle extracts and key phenolic constituents, particularly hydroxychavicol and eugenol, exhibit antibacterial activity against BV-associated taxa and anti-virulence effects consistent with biofilm weakening and interference with quorum-sensing–regulated behaviors. Importantly, several studies suggest comparatively limited inhibitory effects on Lactobacillus spp., supporting the plausibility of a microbiome-sparing profile that may facilitate restoration of vaginal eubiosis. Nevertheless, the evidence base is constrained by heterogeneous methodologies, predominance of preclinical models, and substantial variability in phytochemical composition across preparations. Conclusion: Overall, P. betle emerges as a biologically plausible adjunctive or preventive candidate for preventing BV recurrence, warranting standardized formulations, marker-based quality control, and rigorous clinical evaluation with recurrence-focused endpoints.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ijbstm

Publisher

Subject

Medicine & Pharmacology Public Health

Description

International Journal of Biomedical Science and Travel Medicine is published twice (March and September) a year. The objective is to promote articles on biology and medicine. International Journal of Biomedical Science and Travel Medicine publishes original research work related to biological and ...