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Ranking microbiome variance in inflammatory bowel disease: a large longitudinal intercontinental study

Authors :
Clooney, Adam G
Eckenberger, Julia
Laserna-Mendieta, Emilio
Sexton, Kathryn A
Bernstein, Matthew T
Vagianos, Kathy
Sargent, Michael
Ryan, Feargal J
Moran, Carthage
Sheehan, Donal
Sleator, Roy D
Targownik, Laura E
Bernstein, Charles N
Shanahan, Fergus
Claesson, Marcus J
Source :
Gut; 2021, Vol. 70 Issue: 3 p499-510, 12p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectiveThe microbiome contributes to the pathogenesis of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) but the relative contribution of different lifestyle and environmental factors to the compositional variability of the gut microbiota is unclear.DesignHere, we rank the size effect of disease activity, medications, diet and geographic location of the faecal microbiota composition (16S rRNA gene sequencing) in patients with Crohn’s disease (CD; n=303), ulcerative colitis (UC; n = 228) and controls (n=161), followed longitudinally (at three time points with 16 weeks intervals).ResultsReduced microbiota diversity but increased variability was confirmed in CD and UC compared with controls. Significant compositional differences between diseases, particularly CD, and controls were evident. Longitudinal analyses revealed reduced temporal microbiota stability in IBD, particularly in patients with changes in disease activity. Machine learning separated disease from controls, and active from inactive disease, when consecutive time points were modelled. Geographic location accounted for most of the microbiota variance, second to the presence or absence of CD, followed by history of surgical resection, alcohol consumption and UC diagnosis, medications and diet with most (90.3%) of the compositional variance stochastic or unexplained.ConclusionThe popular concept of precision medicine and rational design of any therapeutic manipulation of the microbiota will have to contend not only with the heterogeneity of the host response, but also with widely differing lifestyles and with much variance still unaccounted for.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
70
Issue :
3
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs55271181
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2020-321106