| Literature DB >> 29530088 |
Pierre H H Schneeberger1,2, Jean T Coulibaly1,2,3,4, Gordana Panic1,2, Claudia Daubenberger1,2, Morgan Gueuning5, Jürg E Frey5, Jennifer Keiser6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Schistosomiasis is a neglected tropical disease burdening millions of people. One drug, praziquantel, is currently used for treatment and control. Clinically relevant drug resistance has not yet been described, but there is considerable heterogeneity in treatment outcomes, ranging from cure to only moderate egg reduction rates. The objectives of this study are to investigate potential worm-induced dysbacteriosis of the gut microbiota and to assess whether a specific microbiome profile could influence praziquantel response.Entities:
Keywords: Gut microbiome; Infectious disease; Microbiome-drug interaction; Microbiome-parasite interaction; Praziquantel; Schistosoma mansoni
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29530088 PMCID: PMC5848565 DOI: 10.1186/s13071-018-2739-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Parasit Vectors ISSN: 1756-3305 Impact factor: 3.876
Summary of participants investigated in this study. Each child provided a sample before, 24 hours after and 3 weeks after treatment with single dose (60 mg/kg) dose of praziquantel. For the placebo controls, samples were collected at the same time points
| Infection intensity (epg) | Treatment outcome | No. of participants | Sample identifiers | Group name | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Negative | 0 | Not applicable | 6 | 1; 12; 13; 14; 15; 25 | Controls |
| Positive | 1–99 | Cure | 0 | Cure | |
| 100–399 | 5 | 11; 17; 22; 26; 28 | |||
| > 400 | 4 | 2; 7; 16; 27 | |||
| 1–99 | Not cured | 3 | 19; 23; 32 | Not cured | |
| 100–399 | 3 | 10; 30; 31 | |||
| > 400 | 2 | 5; 8 | |||
| 1–99 | Placebo | 3 | 20; 29; 34 | Placebo | |
| 100–399 | 5 | 6; 18; 21; 24; 33; 1 | |||
| > 400 | 3 | 3; 4; 9 |
Abbreviation: epg eggs per gram stool
Fig. 1Composition of the microbiota of pre-treatment samples at two taxonomic levels. This bar chart shows the composition of the most abundant bacterial groups of each patient, both at the phylum level (a) as well as at the family level (b)
Fig. 2The gut microbiome composition differences in samples collected from S. mansoni negative and positive children at baseline. a Quantitative representation of the differences in the gut microbial composition of both groups using a bar chart representation and an LDA model (P < 0.05). b Taxonomic representation of significantly different relative abundances. Discriminative features (P < 0.05) are observed at various taxonomic levels
Fig. 3Indicators of microbial diversity in control and infected samples, both before and 24 hours after treatment. a Faith’s Phylogenetic Diversity indicator. b The absolute number of observed species. c The Shannon’s index. d The Chao 1 index
Fig. 4Differences in the gut microbiota of children infected with S. mansoni after administration of placebo or praziquantel. This cladogram shows the differences in bacterial composition of infected children receiving a placebo treatment (= Placebo) or infected children with failed treatment receiving a unique dose of 60 mg/kg praziquantel (= Low)
Fig. 5Comparison of microbiome in the treatment failures versus successful treatment groups. a Before administration of praziquantel. b 24 hours after administration of 60 mg/kg praziquantel. Using the same statistical tests did not reveal any differences of the same groups for the 3 weeks follow-up samples (data not shown)
Fig. 6Fusobacterium spp. qPCR. a The copy number for Fusobacterium spp. before treatment both in cured and non-cured children. b The variation in copies number over the 24 hours post-treatment period in both cured and non-cured children