| Literature DB >> 26579131 |
Alexander Oberc1, Brian K Coombes2.
Abstract
Crohn's disease (CD) is an immune-mediated intestinal illness that significantly compromises health in many developed countries. Although definitive causes remain elusive, the required contribution of microbes in the progression of disease has become an accepted concept. Known CD risk factors, such as antibiotic use and acute infectious gastroenteritis, may impact the gut. This concept is now being explored with a view toward understanding the beneficial and unfavorable microbes that may be altered in numbers during such external insults. A comprehensive understanding of the microbial component to CD could be useful clinically as future therapies may focus on preventing risk exposures on susceptible individuals, eliminating harmful microbes, or restoring a protective gut microbiome. Here, we examine how acute infectious gastroenteritis and antibiotic exposure may impact the gut microbiota in the context of inflammation in CD.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; adherent-invasive E. coli; antibiotics; gastroenteritis; microbiota
Year: 2015 PMID: 26579131 PMCID: PMC4630591 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2015.00558
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Phylogenetic tree of bacterial groups associated with increased or decreased abundance in the gut microbiome of Crohn’s disease patients. In cases were bacterial groups have been associated both increases and decreases, studies showing increased abundance are indicated with “↑” and studies showing decreased abundance are indicated with “↓.” Numbers indicate references as follows; 1, Frank et al. (21); 2, Gevers et al. (27); 3, Hansen et al. (31); 4, Morgan et al. (22); 5, Sokol et al. (20); 6, Manichanh et al. (17); 7, Sokol et al. (32); 8, Sokol et al. (33). Tree topology was created using phyloT (http://phylot.biobyte.de/) and the figure was made using ITOL (http://itol.embl.de/).
Epidemiological studies associating infectious gastroenteritis and Crohn’s disease.
| Study | Type | Location | Population size | Type of association | Risk [95% CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garcia Rodriguez et al. ( | Retrospective cohort | United Kingdom | IGE: 43,013 Cont: 50,000 | Overall | HR 6.6 [1.9, 22.4] |
| Porter et al. ( | Case–control | United States | CD: 1,037 Cont: 11,646 | Overall | OR 1.54 [1.1, 2.04] |
| Gradel et al. ( | Case–control | Denmark | IGE: 13,148 Cont: 26,216 | Overall | HR 3.0 [1.7, 5.3] |
IGE, infectious gastroenteritis; HR, hazard ratio; OR, odds ratio.
Epidemiological studies associating antibiotic treatment with subsequent CD diagnosis.
| Study | Type | Location | Population size (CD:control or cohort size) | Type of association | Risk [95% CI] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Card et al. ( | Adult | United Kingdom | 587:1460 | 2–5 years before CD diagnosis | OR 1.32 [1.05, 1.65] |
| Case–control | |||||
| Margolis et al. ( | Adult | United Kingdom | 94,487 | Overall | HR 1.62 [1.04, 2.53] |
| Retrospective cohort | |||||
| Shaw et al. ( | Adult | Canada | 1025:22,346 | 2–5 years before CD diagnosis | AOR 1.29 [1.18, 1.40] |
| Case–control | |||||
| Hildebrand et al. ( | Pediatric | Sweden | 1098:6550 | Pneumonia <5 years old | OR 3.56 [1.79, 7.08] |
| Case–control | |||||
| Hviid et al. ( | Pediatric | Denmark | 577:627 | Overall | RR 3.41 [1.45, 8.02] |
| Retrospective cohort | |||||
| Virta et al. ( | Pediatric | Finland | 233:2380 | 2 years before CD diagnosis | AOR 1.87 [1.37, 2.56] |
| Case–control |
OR, odds ratio; HR, hazard ratio; AOR, adjusted odds ratio; RR, relative risk.