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The potential of rectal swabs to differentiate simple and complex appendicitis in children with a microbiota-based test

Authors :
Sarah-May M. L. The
Tim G. J. de Meij
Andries E. Budding
Roel Bakx
Johanna H. van der Lee
Linda Poort
Huib A. Cense
Hugo A. Heij
L. W. Ernst van Heurn
Ramon R. Gorter
Pediatrics
Amsterdam Gastroenterology Endocrinology Metabolism
Amsterdam Reproduction & Development (AR&D)
Pediatric surgery
Other Research
AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system
Graduate School
General Paediatrics
APH - Methodology
APH - Quality of Care
Paediatric Surgery
Source :
European Journal of Pediatrics, 181(12), 4221-4226. Springer Verlag, The, S-M M L, de Meij, T G J, Budding, A E, Bakx, R, van der Lee, J H, Poort, L, Cense, H A, Heij, H A, van Heurn, L W E & Gorter, R R 2022, ' The potential of rectal swabs to differentiate simple and complex appendicitis in children with a microbiota-based test ', European Journal of Pediatrics, vol. 181, no. 12, pp. 4221-4226 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00431-022-04627-0, European journal of pediatrics, 181(12), 4221-4226. Springer Verlag
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Currently, accurate biomarkers differentiating simple (phlegmonous) from complex (gangrenous and/or perforated) appendicitis in children are lacking. However, both types may potentially require different treatment strategies, and the search for diagnostic modalities remains warranted. Previously, we demonstrated a distinct microbiota (both an increased bacterial diversity and abundance) in the appendix of children with complex compared to simple appendicitis. From the same cohort of patients we have collected 35 rectal swabs under general anesthesia prior to appendectomy and microbiota analysis was performed by IS-pro, a 16S-23S rDNA–based clinical microbiota profiling technique. Using the obtained IS-profiles, we performed cluster analyses (UPGMA), comparison of diversity (Shannon Diversity Index) and intensity (abundance in relative fluorescence units) on phylum level, and comparison on species level of bacteria between simple and complex appendicitis. Regarding these analyses, we observed no clear differences between simple and complex appendicitis. However, increased similarity of the microbial composition of the appendix and rectal swab was found within children with complex compared to simple appendicitis. Furthermore, PLS-DA regression analysis provided clear visual differentiation between simple and complex appendicitis, but the diagnostic power was low (highest AUC 0.65). Conclusion: Microbiota analysis of rectal swabs may be viable to differentiate between simple and complex appendicitis prior to surgery as a supervised classification model allowed for discrimination of both types. However, the current diagnostic power was low and further validation studies are needed to assess the value of this method. What is Known:• Simple and complex appendicitis in children may require different treatment strategies, but accurate preoperative biomarkers are lacking.• Clear differentiation can be made between both types in children based upon the microbial composition in the appendix. What is New:• Increased similarity was found between the microbial composition of the appendix and rectal swab within children with complex compared to simple appendicitis.• Using a supervised classification model rectal swabs may be viable to discriminate between simple and complex appendicitis, but the diagnostic power was low.

Details

ISSN :
14321076 and 03406199
Volume :
181
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Pediatrics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ccf64da5909238af50f236a28e2bcd6a