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Age-related patterns of microbial dysbiosis in multiplex inflammatory bowel disease families

Authors :
Jacobs, Jonathan P
Spencer, Elizabeth A
Helmus, Drew S
Yang, Julianne C
Lagishetty, Venu
Bongers, Gerold
Britton, Graham
Gettler, Kyle
Reyes-Mercedes, Pamela
Hu, Jianzhong
Hart, Amy
LamouseĢ-Smith, Esi
Wehkamp, Jan
Landers, Carol
Debbas, Philip
Torres, Joana
Colombel, Jean-Frederic
Cho, Judy
Peter, Inga
Faith, Jeremiah
Braun, Jonathan
Dubinsky, Marla
Source :
Gut; 2024, Vol. 73 Issue: 12 p1953-1964, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

ObjectiveIBD is characterised by dysbiosis, but it remains unclear to what extent dysbiosis develops in unaffected at-risk individuals. To address this, we investigated age-related patterns of faecal and serum markers of dysbiosis in high-risk multiplex IBD families (two or more affected first-degree relatives).DesignFaecal and serum samples were collected from multiplex IBD and control families (95 IBD, 292 unaffected, 51 controls). Findings were validated in independent cohorts of 616 and 1173 subjects including patients with IBD, infants born to mothers with IBD and controls. 16S rRNA gene sequencing and global untargeted metabolomics profiling of faeces and serum were performed.ResultsMicrobial and metabolomic parameters of dysbiosis progressively decreased from infancy until age 8. This microbial maturation process was slower in infants born to mothers with IBD. After age 15, dysbiosis steadily increased in unaffected relatives throughout adulthood. Dysbiosis was accompanied by marked shifts in the faecal metabolome and, to a lesser extent, the serum metabolome. Faecal and serum metabolomics dysbiosis indices were validated in an independent cohort. Dysbiosis was associated with elevated antimicrobial serologies but not with faecal calprotectin. Dysbiosis metrics differentiated IBD from non-IBD comparably to serologies, with a model combining calprotectin, faecal metabolomics dysbiosis index and serology score demonstrating highest accuracy.ConclusionThese findings support that dysbiosis exists as a pre-disease state detectable by faecal and serum biomarkers for IBD risk prediction. Given the expansion of disease-modifying agents and non-invasive imaging, the indices developed here may facilitate earlier diagnoses and improved management in at-risk individuals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00175749 and 14683288
Volume :
73
Issue :
12
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Gut
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
ejs67960777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2024-332475