| Literature DB >> 26657899 |
Floris Imhann1, Marc Jan Bonder2, Arnau Vich Vila1, Jingyuan Fu2, Zlatan Mujagic3, Lisa Vork3, Ettje F Tigchelaar2, Soesma A Jankipersadsing2, Maria Carmen Cenit2, Hermie J M Harmsen4, Gerard Dijkstra1, Lude Franke2, Ramnik J Xavier5, Daisy Jonkers3, Cisca Wijmenga2, Rinse K Weersma1, Alexandra Zhernakova2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are among the top 10 most widely used drugs in the world. PPI use has been associated with an increased risk of enteric infections, most notably Clostridium difficile. The gut microbiome plays an important role in enteric infections, by resisting or promoting colonisation by pathogens. In this study, we investigated the influence of PPI use on the gut microbiome.Entities:
Keywords: ENTERIC INFECTIONS; INTESTINAL BACTERIA; PROTON PUMP INHIBITION
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26657899 PMCID: PMC4853569 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2015-310376
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Characteristics of the three independent cohorts in this study
| Cohort 1: LifeLines-DEEP | Cohort 2: patients with IBD | Cohort 3: IBS case-control study | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PPI users | Non-PPI users (n=1075) | PPI users | Non-PPI users (n=240) | PPI users | Non-PPI users (n=289) | |
| Average (SD)* | Average (SD)* | Average (SD)* | Average (SD)* | Average (SD)* | Average (SD)* | |
| Age | 51.94 (13.59) | 44.79 (13.58) | 50.87 (14.49) | 42.45 (14.57) | 51.94 (14.27) | 44.57 (18.24) |
| BMI | 27.73 (5.10) | 25.05 (4.03) | 26.14 (5.53) | 25.58 (4.72) | 26.24 (4.10) | 24.16 (4.11) |
| Gender (% male) | 36.36 | 42.05 | 61.67 | 39.17 | 30.77 | 33.56 |
| Reads per sample | 48879 (43 001) | 55 884 (40057) | 51 081 (43 990) | 52 970 (37787) | 43 807 (28604) | 65842 (119296) |
| Antibiotics (%) | 2.02 | 1.02 | 31.67 | 16.67 | 0.00 | 1.73 |
| IBD (%) | 0.00 | 0.00 | 100.00 | 100.00 | 0.00 | 0.00 |
| IBS (%) | 34.34 | 25.77 | 0.00 | 0.00 | 90.38 | 49.48 |
| Diarrhoea (%) (IBS-D and functional diarrhoea together) | 7.07 | 4.47 | – | – | 28.4 | 17.3 |
| Average bowel movements per day | 1.36 (0.53) | 1.38 (0.61) | – | – | 1.60 (0.81) | 1.92 (1.11) |
| Anti-TNF-a (%) | – | – | 38.33 | 28.75 | – | – |
| Mesalazine (%) | –- | –- | 26.67 | 39.58 | – | – |
| Methotrexate (%) | – | – | 16.67 | 5.42 | – | – |
| Steroids (%) | – | – | 30.00 | 20.42 | – | – |
| Thiopurines (%) | –- | – | 21.67 | 37.08 | – | – |
*Unless otherwise stated
IBD, Inflammatory Bowel Disease; IBS, Irritable Bowel Syndrome; SD, standard deviation, BMI, body mass index.
MUMC, Maastricht University Medical Center; PPI, proton pump inhibitor, TNF-a, tumour necrosis factor; UMCG, University Medical Center Groningen.
Figure 1PPI-associated statistically significant differences in the gut microbiome. Meta-analysis of three independent cohorts comprising 1815 faecal samples, showing a cladogram (circular hierarchical tree) of 92 significantly increased or decreased bacterial taxa in the gut microbiome of PPI users compared with non-users (FDR<0.05). Each dot represents a bacterial taxon. The two innermost dots represent the highest level of taxonomy in our data: the kingdoms Archea and Bacteria (prokaryotes), followed outwards by the lower levels: phylum, class, order, family, genus and species. Red dots represent significantly increased taxa. Blue dots represent significantly decreased taxa. FDR, false discovery rate; PPI, proton pump inhibitor.
Figure 2Significantly altered families in PPI users consistent in three cohorts. Meta-analysis of three independent cohorts comprising 1815 faecal samples. The heatmap shows 19 families significantly increased or decreased associated with PPI use in the gut microbiome for each cohort and for the meta-analysis (meta-analysis FDR<0.05). FDR, false discovery rate; PPI, proton pump inhibitor.
Figure 3Principal coordinate analysis of 1815 gut microbiome samples and 116 oral microbiome samples. The gut microbiome of PPI users is significantly different from non-PPI users in the first coordinate (PCoA1: p=1.39×10−20, Wilcoxon test). For Principal Coordinate 1 there is a significant shift of the gut microbiome of PPI users towards the oral microbiome. PCoA, principal coordinate analysis; PPI, proton pump inhibitor.
Taxa and microbiome aspects associated with PPI use and increased risk of C. difficile infection
| Taxa or microbiome aspect | Direction in PPI users that increases the risk of | References of role on risk of |
|---|---|---|
| Reduced | Buffie | |
| k__Bacteria | Decreased | Reeves |
| k__Bacteria | Decreased | Buffie |
| k__Bacteria | Increased | Antharam |
| k__Bacteria | Increased | Reeves |
| k__Bacteria | Increased | Antharam |
| k__Bacteria | Increased | Antharam |
PPI, proton pump inhibitor.
k__, kingdom; p__, phylum; c__, class; o__, order; f__, family; g__, genus; s__, species
associations are in bold