| Literature DB >> 25825673 |
Alexa Weingarden1, Antonio González2, Yoshiki Vázquez-Baeza3, Sophie Weiss4, Gregory Humphry5, Donna Berg-Lyons5, Dan Knights6, Tatsuya Unno7, Aleh Bobr8, Johnthomas Kang9, Alexander Khoruts9, Rob Knight10, Michael J Sadowsky1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an effective treatment for recurrent Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) that often fails standard antibiotic therapy. Despite its widespread recent use, however, little is known about the stability of the fecal microbiota following FMT.Entities:
Keywords: Short- and long-term changes in microbiota following FMT
Year: 2015 PMID: 25825673 PMCID: PMC4378022 DOI: 10.1186/s40168-015-0070-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microbiome ISSN: 2049-2618 Impact factor: 14.650
Figure 1Fecal bacterial communities of recurrent CDI patients shift towards HMP fecal bacterial communities after FMT. Pre-FMT patient samples (red circle); post-FMT patient samples (green circles); trajectory of patient fecal communities after FMT (blue line).
Figure 2Microbial communities shift following FMT. (A) Unweighted (left) and weighted (right) UniFrac analyses followed by principal component analysis of bacterial communities of recurrent CDI patient fecal samples before (red) and after FMT and donor samples (blue). (B) Weighted UniFrac analysis followed by principal component analysis of bacterial communities of patients before (red) and after FMT versus HMP fecal communities (purple). PC, principal component. Percentages represent percent variability explained by each principal component. Se key at right for colors associated with samples before FMT (pre-FMT), from HMP and donor, and from patients after FMT (CD1 to CD4).
Figure 3Changes in fecal microbial communities after FMT. Relative abundance of sequences classified to the level of bacterial phyla before and after FMT in patient fecal samples. Samples after FMT indicated with dashed line. See key at right.
Figure 4Changes in the order after FMT. (A) Relative abundance of Enterobacteriales in donor and patient samples before and after FMT in samples common across all patients. (B) Control charts of relative abundance of Enterobacteriales in donor (leftmost sample) and patient samples before and after FMT. Patient CD1 (top left), patient CD2 (top right), patient CD3 (bottom left), patient CD4 (bottom right). LCL, lower control limit; UCL, upper control limit; mean relative abundance in all samples (center). LCL and UCL represent three standard deviations in relative abundance below and above the mean, respectively. Dashed lines indicate samples after FMT.
Figure 5Pearson and Spearman correlations between fecal communities before and after FMT. (A) Heat map of Pearson correlation values between each sample within each patient set, corresponding donor, and 10 additional pre-FMT patient samples (far right). (B) Pearson correlation values between donor sample and each patient sample. (C) Spearman correlations between donor sample and each patient sample. (D) Heat maps of Pearson (i) and Spearman (ii) correlation values between earliest donor sample and eleven subsequent samples; days represent collection time of each sample versus earliest donor sample. CD1 to CD4, patients 1 to 4. Dashed lines indicate samples after FMT.
values of normalization and dynamic range of patient samples sets versus donor set
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| CD1 | 0.154 | 0.484 |
| CD2 | 0.429 | 0.429 |
| CD3 | 0.165 | 0.308 |
| CD4 | 0.484 | 0.473 |