| Literature DB >> 28824902 |
Dhiraj Agarwal1,2, Dhiraj Dhotre3, Rutuja Patil2, Yogesh Shouche3, Sanjay Juvekar2,4, Sundeep Salvi1.
Abstract
Health and demographic surveillance system (HDSS) is a population-based health and vital event registration system that monitors demographic and health events in a geographically defined population at regular intervals. Human microbiome research in the past decade has been the field of increasingly intense research much due to its demonstrated impact upon various health conditions including human chronic airway diseases such as asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Many confounding factors have been revealed to play a role in shaping the microbiome in chronic airway diseases. Asthma and COPD follows a typical pattern of disease progression, which includes stable and exacerbation state in which the microbiota is known to vary. However, many such studies lack extensive and longitudinal sampling with inadequate metadata, which has resulted in the inconsistencies in the observations. HDSS provides such a platform, which can offer a deeper understanding of the role of the microbiome in human health. In this review, we highlight opportunities and limitations in microbiome research with the help of studies conducted on chronic airway diseases like asthma and COPD. In addition, we also emphasize on the benefits of HDSS and future directions in lung microbiome research.Entities:
Keywords: asthma; chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; health and demographic surveillance system; microbiome; microbiota
Year: 2017 PMID: 28824902 PMCID: PMC5543077 DOI: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00196
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Public Health ISSN: 2296-2565
Figure 1Summary of microbes altered in microbial dysbiosis and factors associated with microbial dysbiosis in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) subjects.
List of microbiome studies conducted in asthma population.
| Sr. no. | Reference | Year | Sample type | Sample size and study group | Sample Selection | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Castro-Nallar et al. ( | 2015 | Nasal epithelial cells | 8 asthma, 6 control | Cohort | Microbial communities differ in asthmatic as compared to healthy. The pathogenic |
| 2 | Huang et al. ( | 2015 | Bronchial brushings | 40 severe asthma, 41 mild to moderate asthma, 7 healthy | Previous study cohort | Specific microbiota is associated with and may modulate inflammatory processes in patients with severe asthma and related phenotypes. More airway dysbiosis in severe asthma as compared to mild asthma |
| 3 | Zhang et al. ( | 2012 | Bronchial brush, lavage cells, and sputum | 29 severe asthma, 24 non-severe asthma, 19 healthy | Not mentioned | |
| 4 | Park et al. ( | 2014 | Oropharyngeal swab | 18 COPD, 17 asthma, 12 controls | Not mentioned | No significant difference between microbiota in asthmatic and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) |
| 5 | Marri et al. ( | 2012 | Sputum | 10 asthma, 10 controls | Previous study cohort | Asthmatics with greater diverse microbes as compared to healthy with the |
| 6 | Hilty et al. ( | 2010 | Nose and oropharynx swabs | 5 COPD, 11 asthma, 8 control, 13 asthma (pediatric), 7 controls | Not Mentioned | Pathogenic |
| 7 | Zhang et al. ( | 2016 | Sputum | 26 severe asthma, 18 non-severe asthma, 12 healthy | Clinic-based recruitment | Sputum microbiota in severe asthma differs from healthy controls and non-severe asthmatics and is characterized by the presence of |
| 8 | Pérez-Losada et al. ( | 2015 | Nasal epithelial cells | 8 asthma, 6 healthy | Cohort | Enrichment analysis of 499 differentially expressed host genes for inflammatory and immune responses revealed 43 upstream regulators differentially activated in asthma. Microbial adhesion (virulence) and |
| 9 | Huang et al. ( | 2011 | Bronchial epithelial brushings | 65 asthma, 10 healthy | Previous study cohort | The composition of bronchial airway microbiota is associated with the degree of bronchial hyperresponsiveness among patients with suboptimally controlled asthma |
| 10 | Durack et al. ( | 2016 | Oral wash and bronchial brushings | 42 steroid-naive atopic asthma, 21 with atopy but no asthma, 21 non-atopic healthy | Previous study cohort | Differences in the bronchial microbiome are associated with immunologic and clinical features of the disease |
| 11 | Simpson et al. ( | 2015 | Sputum | 46 asthma | Previous study cohort | Phenotype-specific alterations to the airway microbiome in asthma |
| 12 | Taylor et al. ( | 2017 | Sputum | 167 asthma | Previous study cohort | Neutrophilic asthma is associated with airway microbiology that is significantly different from that seen in patients with other inflammatory phenotypes, particularly eosinophilic asthma |
List of microbiome studies conducted in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) population.
| Sr. no. | Reference | Year | Sample type | Sample size and study group | Sample selection | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sze et al. ( | 2015 | Lung tissue | 5 COPD, 4 control | Not mentioned | Host immune response to microorganisms within the lung microbiome contribute to the pathogenesis of COPD |
| 2 | Aguirre et al. ( | 2015 | Sputum | 19 COPD | Clinic-based recruitment | Found pathogenic genus |
| 3 | Garcia-Nuñez et al. ( | 2014 | Sputum | 17 COPD (severity) | Clinic-based recruitment | As the severity of COPD increases, microbial diversity decreases |
| 4 | Park et al. ( | 2014 | Oropharyngeal swab | 18 COPD, 17 asthma, 12 controls | Not mentioned | No significant difference between microbiota in asthmatic and COPD |
| 5 | Zakharkina et al. ( | 2013 | Broncho alveolar lavage | 9 COPD, 9 healthy | Not mentioned | The presence of highly diverse bacterial communities in the lungs of healthy individuals and COPD patients |
| 6 | Pragman et al. ( | 2012 | Broncho alveolar lavage fluid (BALF) | 22 COPD, 10 controls | Previous study cohort | Increase in microbial diversity in COPD patients |
| 7 | Sze et al. ( | 2012 | Lung tissue | 8 non-smoker, 8 smoker, 8 COPD, 8 cystic fibrosis | Not mentioned | Lung tissue harbors detectable bacterial community and its changes in patients with severe COPD |
| 8 | Erb-downward et al. ( | 2011 | BALF and lung tissue | 3 never-smokers, 7 smokers, 4 COPD | Previous study cohort | Lesser microbial diversity in the patients with decreased lung function |
| 9 | Huang et al. ( | 2010 | Endotracheal aspirates | 8 COPD | Hospital database | Bacterial community diversity in COPD airways is substantially greater than previously recognized and includes a number of potential pathogens detected in the setting of antibiotic exposure |
| 10 | Hilty et al. ( | 2010 | Nose and oropharynx swabs | 5 COPD, 11 asthma, 8 control, 13 asthma (pediatric), 7 controls | Not mentioned | Pathogenic |
| 11 | Wu et al. ( | 2014 | Sputum | 10 COPD, 10 healthy | Not mentioned | Significant increases of |
| 12 | Einarsson et al. ( | 2016 | Bronchial wash | 18 COPD, 8 smokers with no airways disease, 11 healthy | Clinic-based recruitment | Microbial community differs significantly in COPD in comparison with smokers and non-smokers. |
| 13 | Cabrera-Rubio et al. ( | 2012 | Sputum, bronchial aspirate, bronchoalveolar lavage, and bronchial mucosa | 6 moderate COPD | Previous study cohort | Bronchial tree is not sterile in COPD patients and different microbiota present in the upper and lower compartments of the respiratory tract |
| 14 | Garcia-Nuñez et al. ( | 2017 | Sputum | 21 COPD | Hospital-based cohort | The bronchial microbiome shows differences according to with |
| 15 | Lee et al. ( | 2016 | Sputum | 4 moderate, 4 severe COPD | Not mentioned | Bacterial composition determined by 16S rRNA gene sequencing may not directly translate to the set of actively expressing bacteria as defined by transcriptome sequencing |
| 16 | Cameron et al. ( | 2016 | Sputum | 8 COPD, 10 healthy | Previous observational study | Significant changes in the abundance of |
| 17 | Wang et al. ( | 2016 | Sputum | 87 COPD | Not mentioned | Dynamic lung microbiota associated with exacerbation events and indicative of specific exacerbation phenotypes. Antibiotic and steroid treatments have differential effects on the lung microbiome |
| 18 | Millares et al. ( | 2015 | Sputum | 8 Severe COPD | Hospital-based cohort | Bronchial microbiome as a whole is not significantly modified when exacerbation symptoms appear in severe COPD patients, but its functional metabolic capabilities show significant changes in several pathways |
| 19 | Huang et al. ( | 2014 | Sputum | 12 COPD | 12 COPD | Changes in the bacterial composition after treatment for an exacerbation differed significantly among the therapy regimens |
| 20 | Huang and Boushey ( | 2015 | Sputum | 12 COPD | 12 COPD | Exacerbations of COPD are associated with heterogeneous changes in the bronchial microbiome, with increases in the abundance of species related to typical COPD pathogens and decreases in microbiota members that contribute to compositional and functional homeostasis |
Figure 2Conceptual framework showing how health and demographic surveillance system (HDSS) benefit human microbiome studies.