| Literature DB >> 32093202 |
Andrea Ticinesi1,2, Antonio Nouvenne1,2, Giulia Chiussi1, Giampiero Castaldo1, Angela Guerra1,3, Tiziana Meschi1,2,3.
Abstract
Recent studies have shown that patients with kidney stone disease, and particularly calcium oxalate nephrolithiasis, exhibit dysbiosis in their fecal and urinary microbiota compared with controls. The alterations of microbiota go far beyond the simple presence and representation of Oxalobacter formigenes, a well-known symbiont exhibiting a marked capacity of degrading dietary oxalate and stimulating oxalate secretion by the gut mucosa. Thus, alterations of the intestinal microbiota may be involved in the pathophysiology of calcium kidney stones. However, the role of nutrition in this gut-kidney axis is still unknown, even if nutritional imbalances, such as poor hydration, high salt, and animal protein intake and reduced fruit and vegetable intake, are well-known risk factors for kidney stones. In this narrative review, we provide an overview of the gut-kidney axis in nephrolithiasis from a nutritional perspective, summarizing the evidence supporting the role of nutrition in the modulation of microbiota composition, and their relevance for the modulation of lithogenic risk.Entities:
Keywords: Oxalobacter; diet; microbiome; oxalate; renal calculi; urolithiasis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32093202 PMCID: PMC7071363 DOI: 10.3390/nu12020548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Overview of human observational studies investigating the association between nephrolithiasis and prevalence of Oxalobacter formigenes in feces.
| AUTHOR, YEAR [REF] | METHODS OF MICROBIOTA ANALYSIS | PARTICIPANTS | MAIN RESULTS | NOTES |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sidhu H et al., 1998 [ | Culture + PCR if cultures negative | 43 children with cystic fibrosis, 21 healthy children | Prevalence of | None of the participants had kidney stones. |
| Sidhu H et al. 1999 [ | Culture + PCR | 51 adult idiopathic calcium oxalate SFs, 44 healthy volunteers | Prevalence of | Cases and controls inhomogeneous for age and geographical location. |
| Kumar R, et al. 2004 [ | PCR | 37 ulcerative colitis, 11 Crohn’s disease, 87 calcium SFs, 48 healthy controls | Prevalence of | The study focused on IBD-associated forms of calcium stones. |
| Kaufman DW, et al. 2008 [ | Culture | 247 calcium SFs, 259 age-, sex- and location-matched controls | Prevalence of | Absence of genomic methods of |
| Siener R, et al. 2013 [ | Culture + PCR | 37 calcium SFs | Prevalence of | Study focused on oxalate metabolism; no controls enrolled. |
| Tavasoli S, et al. 2020 [ | PCR | 29 SFs with hyperoxaluria, 29 SFs without hyperoxaluria, 29 controls | Investigated also |
PCR = Polymerase Chain Reaction; IBD = Inflammatory Bowel Disease; SFs = Stone Formers.
Overview of human intervention studies investigating the effects of the administration of oxalate-degrading bacteria on lithogenic risk.
| AUTHOR, YEAR [REF] | PROBIOTIC | DESIGN, PARTICIPANTS AND FOLLOW-UP DURATION | KEY FINDINGS |
|---|---|---|---|
| Campieri C, et al. 2001 [ | Lactobacilli ( | Prospective single-arm intervention, 6 calcium stone formers, 4-week of follow-up | All participants experienced redution of urinary oxalate excretion (average 40%) |
| Duncan SH, et al. 2002 [ | Prospective single-arm intervention, 2 healthy volunteers, 6-h follow-up | Decrease of urinary oxalate excretion after a dietary oxalate load following the probiotic administration. | |
| Lieske JC, et al. 2005 [ | Oxadrop® ( | Prospective single-arm intervention, 10 stone formers with intestinal malabsorption, 1-month follow-up | Decrease of urinary oxalate excretion shown in 7 participants over 10 (average effect size: −19%). |
| Goldfarb DS, et al. 2007 [ | Oxadrop® ( | RCT, 20 calcium oxalate stone formers with hyperoxaluria, 4-week follow-up | No significant variation of urinary oxalate excretion after treatment in both intervention and control arm. |
| Okombo J, et al. 2010 [ | VSL#3 ( | Prospective single-arm intervention, 11 stone-free volunteers, 4-week follow-up | Reduction of fractional oxalate absorption after a dietary oxalate load (from 31% to 12%). |
| Hoppe B, et al. 2011 [ | Oxabact® ( | RCT, 42 adolescents with primary hyperoxaluria, 24-week follow-up | Reduction of urinary oxalate excretion in both intervention and control arm (average effect size 20% in both groups) |
| Al-Wahsh I, et al. 2012 [ | VSL#3 ( | Prospective single-arm intervention, 11 healthy stone-free volunteers, 24-h follow-up | Reduction of urinary oxalate excretion after a standardized dietary oxalate load |
| Siener R, et al. 2013 [ | Oxadrop® ( | Randomized cross-over trial, 20 stone-free healthy volunteers under high-oxalate diet, 5 week follow-up | No significant variation of oxaluria detected. |
RCT = Randomized Controlled Trial.
Overview of human studies investigating the fecal or urinary microbiota composition in kidney stone formers by using next-generation sequencing techniques.
| AUTHOR, YEAR [REF] | PARTICIPANTS | STONE TYPES | COUNTRY | SAMPLES | MAIN FINDINGS IN STONE FORMERS | TAXA DEPLETED IN STONE FORMERS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suryavanshi et al., 2016 [ | 24 recurrent KSF | Calcium oxalate | India | Feces | Gut microbiota dysbiosis with different clusterization of composition and functionality. Urinary oxalate excretion correlated with the abundance of 12 taxa. | Several species, including |
| Stern et al., 2016 [ | 23 KSF | Calcium | United States | Feces | Different microbiome composition with the prevalence of |
|
| Tang et al., 2018 [ | 13 multiple KSF | Radio-opaque | China | Feces | Trend towards reduced biodiversity. |
|
| Ticinesi et al., 2018 [ | 52 recurrent KSF | Calcium | Italy | Feces | Reduced fecal microbiota biodiversity. |
|
| Suryavanshi et al., 2018 [ | 24 recurrent KSF | Calcium oxalate | India | Feces | Dysbiosis not limited to eubacteria and also involving archaea and eukaryotes. | Several species with oxalate-metabolizing properties and butyrate producers, including |
| Miller et al., 2019 [ | 17 KSF | Calcium oxalate | Canada | Feces | KSF has reduced representation of a network of bacteria directly involved in oxalate degradation or co-occurring with | 103 bacterial taxa, including |
| Zampini et al., 2019 [ | 24 KSF43 controls | Calcium | United States | Feces | Fecal microbiota similar in KSF and controls. | |
| Dornbier et al., 2019 [ | 52 KSF | Any composition | United States | Urine | In 20% of KSF, stone samples exhibit microbial communities with a composition independent of urine. | No comparison with controls provided in the study |
KSF = Kidney Stone Formers.
Overview of the main nutritional imbalances associated with high lithogenic risk and their effects on gut microbiota composition.
| NUTRITIONAL IMBALANCE | EFFECT ON URINE CHEMISTRY AND LITHOGENIC RISK | EFFECT ON GUT MICROBIOTA COMPOSITION |
|---|---|---|
| High salt intake | Increase in urine calcium | Depletion of |
| High animal protein intake | Increase in urine calcium | Depletion of Firmicutes, |
| High oxalate intake | Increase in urine oxalate | Expansion of oxalate-degrading species |
| Low calcium intake | Increase in urine oxalate | Reduced biodiversity with depletion of species producing SCFAs (in mice) |
| Low FAV intake | Decrease in urinary inhibitors of lithogenesis | Depletion of lactic acid bacteria |
| Poor hydration | Decrease in urinary volume | Alterations of representation of some selected taxa, including |
CaOx = Calcium Oxalate; AcUr = Uric Acid; SCFAs = Short-Chain Fatty Acids; FAV = Fruit and Vegetables.
Figure 1Representation of the possible role of nutrition in the gut-kidney axis in nephrolithiasis.