| Literature DB >> 27448997 |
Miika Arvonen1,2,3, Lillemor Berntson4, Tytti Pokka2,3,5, Tuomo J Karttunen2,6,7, Paula Vähäsalo2,3,5, Matthew L Stoll8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis is the most common form of chronic arthritis in children. There is mounting evidence that the microbiota may influence the disease. MAIN BODY: Recent observations in several systemic inflammatory diseases including JIA have indicated that abnormalities in the contents of the microbiota may be factors in disease pathogenesis, while other studies in turn have shown that environmental factors impacting the composition of the microbiota, such as delivery mode and early exposure to antibiotics, affect the risk of chronic inflammatory diseases including JIA. Microbial alterations may predispose to JIA through a variety of mechanisms, including impaired immunologic development, alterations in the balances of pro- versus anti-inflammatory bacteria, and low-grade mucosal inflammation. Additional confirmatory studies of microbiota aberrations and their risk factors are needed, as well as additional mechanistic studies linking these alterations to the disease itself.Entities:
Keywords: Antibiotics; Juvenile arthritis; Microbiota
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27448997 PMCID: PMC4957868 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-016-0104-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Summary of human studies evaluating long-term changes to the microbiota following exposure to antibiotics
| Study | Antibiotic | Patient population | Comparison Group | Habitat | Method of assessment | Duration of follow-up | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De la Cochetiere (2005) | Amoxicillin x 5 days | 6 adults | None | Feces | TTGE of 16S rDNA amplicons | Two months | After two months, profiles were >90 % similar to baseline in 5/6 subjects. |
| Dethlefsen 2011 [ | Two courses of ciprofloxacin x 5 days | 3 adults | None | Feces | Sequencing of 16S rDNA | 10 months | Altered community composition in 3/3, although there was more variability between subjects vs before and after abx. |
| Dethlefsen 2008 [ | One course of ciprofloxacin x 5 days | 3 adults | None | Feces | Sequencing of 16S rDNA | 30 days | Samples returned to baseline at the community level after 30 days, although individual taxa failed to recover. |
| Fouhy 2012a [ | One course of ampicillin and gentamycin | 9 full-term neonates under age 2 days | 9 full-term neonates | Feces | Sequencing of 16S rDNA | 8 weeks | Decreased evenness and richness; alterations in multiple genera. Of note, 9/9 controls but only 4/9 patients were delivered vaginally |
| Jakobsson 2010 [ | One course of metronidazole and clarithromycin x 7 days | 3 adults | 3 adults | Throat and feces | Sequencing of 16S rDNA and T-RFLP | 4 years | General recovery of loss of diversity in both habitats. However, long-lasting effects at the taxonomic level were seen, particularly in the throat. |
| Jernberg 2007 [ | One course of clindamycin x 7 days | 4 adults | 4 adults | Feces | T-RFLP and rep-PCR on | 2 years | Decreased number of bacteroides clonal types in exposed subjects |
| Lode 2001b [ | Linezolid x 7 days | 12 adults | None | Feces | Culture and identification | 35 days | No lasting effect |
| Lode 2001b [ | Amoxicillin / clav x 7 days | 12 adults | None | Feces | Culture and identification | 35 days | No lasting effect |
| Mangin 2012 [ | Amoxicillin / clav x 5 days | 18 adult men | None | Feces | qPCR for | 64 days | No difference in total bifidobacteria; however, similarity to baseline dropped to 50 % rapidly and never reached 60 %. |
| Savino 2011 [ | Ceftriaxone x 5 days | 26 full-term breast-fed infants | None | Feces | Culture | 20 days | No changes noted in counts of enterobacteriaceae, enterococci, lactobacilli, or total bacteria |
| Vervoort 2015c [ | Nitrofurantoin x 3 – 15 days | Five or eight subjects | Four or five subjects | Feces | Sequencing of 16S rDNA | 28 days | Only transient differences in the frequency of the phyla. |
aThe duration of treatment was not specified. bThis Lode study was a crossover design with a 35 days washout, in which half received amoxicillin / clavulonic acid first and the other half received linezolid first. cThe methods said five pts and four controls, but the table said 8 and 5, respectively. No information on the age or sex of the subjects. Abbreviations: qPCR quantitative PCR, rDNA ribosomal DNA, rep-PCR repetitive sequence-based PCR, RFLP restriction fragment length polymorphisms, T-RFLP terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism, TTGE temporal temperature gradient gel electrophoresis
Characteristics of the material and results in studies on exposure to antibiotics and risk of juvenile idiopathic arthritis by Horton et al. [30] and Arvonen et al. [31]
| Horton et al. | Arvonen et al. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Kingdom | Finland | |||
| Cases = 152, Controls = 1520 | Cases = 1298, Controls = 5179 | |||
| Risk of later development of JIA after exposure to | OR (95 % CI)a | P | OR (95 % CI)b | P |
| Any antibiotics | 2.1 (1.2 to 3.5) | 0 .007 | 1.6 (1.3 to 1.9) | <0.001 |
| Anaerobic antibiotics onlyc | 1.6 (1.0 to 2.6) | 0.040 | 1.3 (1.04 to 1.7) | 0.021 |
| Non-anti-anaerobic onlyc | 1.6 (1.1 to 2.3) | 0.009 | 1.2 (0.9 to 1.7) | 0.216 |
| Both non-anti-anaerobic and anti-anaerobic antibioticsc | NA | NA | 1.4 (1.1 to 1.8) | <0.001 |
| Dose response | yes | yes | ||
aModels adjusted for matching, any infection, and any personal autoimmune disease (AID)
bModel adjusted for the number of antiobiotic regiments before index day
cFor this analysis, anti-anaerobic antibiotics were broad spectrum penicillins, clindamycin, metronidazole, and tetracyclines (including doxycycline); aerobic antibiotics were cephalosporins, levaquines, macrolides, and sulfonamides
Fig. 1The structure of intestinal mucosal defense and antigen sampling. Primary defense against penetration by luminal microbes is primarily provided by secretory IgA, mucin and antimicrobial peptides. In addition, single layered intestinal epithelial cell are anchored to each other by tight junctions. Goblet cells scattered among the epithelial lining produce mucin, which represents a physical barrier against bacterial access to epithelial cells. Secretory IgA attaches to luminal antigens and protects against invasion of pathogens inhibiting the penetration of harmful antigens. On the epithelial side of the mucin layer, antimicrobial peptides neutralize bacteria that have penetrated through the mucin layer. The Peyer’s patch also contains a specific type of enterocytes, M-cells, which periodically sample the luminal contents, transcytosing luminal antigens. Antigens that have broken through the epithelial barrier to the basolateral lamina propria generate inflammatory responses, while those presented to Peyer’s patches by periodic sampling typically generate regulatory responses [80, 81]. Additionally, T cells activated in mesenteric lymph nodes (not shown) express intestinal homing receptors such as the integrin α4β7, which guide the T cells back to the intestinal mucosa, where they can participate in protective or inflammatory immune responses.