| Literature DB >> 32487252 |
Max W Adelman1, Michael H Woodworth2, Charles Langelier3, Lindsay M Busch4, Jordan A Kempker5, Colleen S Kraft2,6, Greg S Martin5,7.
Abstract
The gut microbiome regulates a number of homeostatic mechanisms in the healthy host including immune function and gut barrier protection. Loss of normal gut microbial structure and function has been associated with diseases as diverse as Clostridioides difficile infection, asthma, and epilepsy. Recent evidence has also demonstrated a link between the gut microbiome and sepsis. In this review, we focus on three key areas of the interaction between the gut microbiome and sepsis. First, prior to sepsis onset, gut microbiome alteration increases sepsis susceptibility through several mechanisms, including (a) allowing for expansion of pathogenic intestinal bacteria, (b) priming the immune system for a robust pro-inflammatory response, and (c) decreasing production of beneficial microbial products such as short-chain fatty acids. Second, once sepsis is established, gut microbiome disruption worsens and increases susceptibility to end-organ dysfunction. Third, there is limited evidence that microbiome-based therapeutics, including probiotics and selective digestive decontamination, may decrease sepsis risk and improve sepsis outcomes in select patient populations, but concerns about safety have limited uptake. Case reports of a different microbiome-based therapy, fecal microbiota transplantation, have shown correlation with gut microbial structure restoration and decreased inflammatory response, but these results require further validation. While much of the evidence linking the gut microbiome and sepsis has been established in pre-clinical studies, clinical evidence is lacking in many areas. To address this, we outline a potential research agenda for further investigating the interaction between the gut microbiome and sepsis.Entities:
Keywords: Sepsis, Gut microbiome, Review, Probiotics, Fecal microbiota transplant
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32487252 PMCID: PMC7266132 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-02989-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Glossary of key concepts for interpreting microbiome research
| Concept | Definition | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Techniques for identifying microbiome components | ||
| Culture-based | Uses traditional techniques for culturing bacteria to determine which species are present | Some species (e.g., anaerobes) are difficult to culture; once cultured, definitive identification may be difficult |
| 16S rRNA sequencing | Uses a conserved region of bacterial RNA to identify bacteria, combined with a species-specific sequence to determine which species are present | Unable to identify genes or presence of non-bacterial components (e.g., protozoa or fungi) |
| Metagenomic sequencing | Uses “unbiased” sequencing to determine all genes present in a sample and construct community structure; allows for determination of community composition and function | Remains relatively expensive, although cost has decreased; applications are still most suitable for research |
| Classification of microbiome composition | ||
| Abundance | Relative amount of specific bacterial groups in a sample | Most techniques only allow for determination of relative abundance of bacteria, not absolute (i.e., unable to determine total number of bacteria present in a sample) |
| α-diversity | Within-group microbiome diversity | Describes the makeup of a microbial community from one sample (e.g., one patient or one body site) |
| β-diversity | Between-group microbiome diversity | Allows for comparisons between groups of samples |
| Dysbiosis | Describes a microbial community that has been altered from its normal structure | Can be nonspecific; for example, unclear if this refers to decreased relative abundance of one group, decreased α-diversity, or another measure |
Fig. 1Conceptual illustration of the pathway between gut microbiome disruption and sepsis. Gut microbiome alteration predisposes to selection for pathobionts (potentially pathogenic bacteria that can reside in the gut microbiome), immune dysregulation, and decreased production of short-chain fatty acids, beneficial products produced by the gut microbiome. These changes can lower the threshold for sepsis development. Sepsis and treatment with antibiotics can drive worsening microbiome disruption in a vicious cycle, contributing to ongoing end-organ dysfunction. ARDS, acute respiratory distress syndrome; FMT, fecal microbiota transplant; MDRO, multi-drug resistant organism; SCFA, short-chain fatty acid
Published case reports on the use of fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) to treat sepsis (other than sepsis secondary to Clostridioides difficile infection)
| Author, year [citation] | Location | Patient age, sex, comorbidity | ICU complications | Sepsis etiology | Gut microbiome changes with FMT | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Li, 2014 [ | China | 29F, UC | Bacteremia, shock | Unclear; prolonged diarrhea | • Pre: few anaerobes, abundant pathogens including | Clinical improvement |
| • Post: shifted to donor stool; increased Bacteroides and Firmicutes | ||||||
| Li, 2015 [ | China | 44F, s/p proximal gastrectomy and vagotomy for NET | Shock, respiratory failure (V-V ECMO), AKI (CRRT) | Unclear; prolonged diarrhea | • Pre: few anaerobes, abundant pathogens including | Clinical improvement |
| • Post: increased Firmicutes; decreased pathobionts | ||||||
| Wei, 2016 [ | China | 65M, hemorrhagic CVA | Shock, respiratory failure, bacteremia | Unclear; prolonged diarrhea | • Pre: different from donor | Clinical improvement |
| • Post: increased Firmicutes, Bacteroides | ||||||
| Wei, 2016 [ | China | 84M, ischemic CVA | AKI (CRRT) | Unclear; prolonged diarrhea | • Pre: different from donor | Clinical improvement |
| • Post: increased Firmicutes, decreased pathobionts | ||||||
| Gopalsamy, 2018 [ | USA | 57M, TBI | MDRO infection, respiratory failure | Pneumonia | Not studied | Death |
AKI acute kidney injury, CRRT continuous renal replacement therapy, CVA cerebrovascular accident, F female, ECMO extra-corporeal membrane oxygenation, FMT fecal microbiota transplant, ICU intensive care unit, M male, MDRO multi-drug resistant organism, NET neuroendocrine tumor, TBI traumatic brain injury, UC ulcerative colitis, USA United States of America, V-V veno-venous
Proposed research priorities for study of the interaction between the gut microbiome and sepsis
| Current knowledge gap: | Studies should address: |
|---|---|
| The role of gut microbiome alteration on sepsis predisposition | • Longitudinal microbiome changes in groups at high risk for sepsis |
| • Microbiome characteristics that indicate high risk for sepsis, including whether these can be used for prediction/diagnosis | |
| • Mechanisms linking increase or decrease of specific taxa to sepsis risk | |
| • How gut microbiome alterations with loss of protective taxa impacts immune dysregulation predisposing to sepsis | |
| • Impact of SCFAs on protection from sepsis | |
| • If altering the gut microbiome can decrease sepsis risk | |
| How the gut microbiome impacts sepsis outcomes | • Correlation of markers of gut microbiome alteration with end-organ dysfunction and mortality |
| • Whether specific patterns of alteration can predict adverse outcomes in sepsis | |
| • Gut microbiome changes that contribute to dysregulated immune responses of sepsis | |
| • Role of pathobionts and antibiotic resistance genes in antibiotic selection | |
| Whether microbiome-directed therapeutics can impact sepsis outcomes | • Which patients with microbiome alteration may benefit from attempting to restore the gut microbiome to lower risk of sepsis |
| • Which patients with sepsis may benefit from microbiome-directed therapeutics to improve sepsis outcomes | |
| • The ideal method of gut microbiome therapeutics (i.e., probiotics, FMT) | |
| • The specific dose, timing, and frequency of FMT that may benefit patients in these groups |
FMT fecal microbiota transplant, SCFA short-chain fatty acid