| Literature DB >> 32684075 |
Sonja Lang1, Bradley Fairfied1, Bei Gao1, Yi Duan1,2, Xinlian Zhang3, Derrick E Fouts4, Bernd Schnabl1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Alcoholic hepatitis is the most severe form of alcohol-related liver disease. While the gut microbiome is known to play a role in disease development and progression, less is known about specific compositional changes of the gut bacterial microbiome associated with disease severity. Therefore, the aim of our study was to correlate gut microbiota features with disease severity in alcoholic hepatitis patients.Entities:
Keywords: 16S sequencing; Microbiome; alcohol-related liver disease; metagenomics
Year: 2020 PMID: 32684075 PMCID: PMC7524371 DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2020.1785251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Microbes ISSN: 1949-0976
Characteristics of patients with alcoholic hepatitis (n = 74).
| Demographics | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sex (% male), n (%), n = 73 | 49 (67.1%) | |
| Age (y), n = 73 | 49.2 (31.3–74.8) | |
| BMI (kg/m2), n = 68 | 27.1 (16.3–48.3) | |
| Mean Alcohol Intake (g/day), n = 63 | 104 (113.5*) | |
| Ethnicity, n = 73 | ||
| Hispanic, n (%) | 13 (17.8) | |
| Non-Hispanic, n (%) | 60 (82.2) | |
| Geographic Location, n = 74 | ||
| USA, n (%) | 43 (58.1) | |
| Mexico, n (%) | 6 (8.1) | |
| Europe, n (%) | 25 (33.8) | |
| Infections and treatment | ||
| Infections, n (%), n = 57 | 13 (22.8) | |
| Steroids, n (%), n = 72 | 22 (30.6) | |
| Pentoxifylline, n (%), n = 70 | 8 (11.4) | |
| Antibiotics, n (%), n = 72 | 35 (48.6) | |
| Proton Pump Inhibitor, n (%), n = 37 | 5 (6.8) | |
| Laboratory parameters | ||
| Creatinine (mg/dL), n = 73 | 0.8 (0.3–8.1) | |
| Bilirubin (mg/dL), n = 73 | 14.1 (2.5–38.6) | |
| AST (IU/L), n = 73 | 136.0 (38.0–456) | |
| ALT (IU/L), n = 73 | 48.0 (15.0–216.0) | |
| Albumin (g/dL), n = 69 | 2.4 (1.3–4.1) | |
| INR, n = 72 | 1.8 (1.0–4.4) | |
| GGT (IU/L), n = 34 | 242.5 (33.0–3632.0) | |
| Platelet count (109/L), n = 70 | 126.0 (21.0–447.0) | |
| Liver histology | ||
| Stage of Fibrosis, n (%), n = 41 | 0/1/2/3/4 | 2 (4.9)/0 (0.0)/6 (14.6)/8 (19.5)/25 (61.0) |
| Lobular fibrosis, n (%), n = 40 | 0/1/2/3 | 4 (10.0)/6 (15.0)/2 (5.0)/28 (70.0) |
| Pericellular fibrosis, n (%), n = 40 | 0/1 | 9 (22.5)/31 (77.5) |
| Grade of steatosis, n (%), n = 41 | 0/1/2/3 | 0 (0.0)/16 (39.0)/12 (29.3)/13 (31.7) |
| Mallory bodies, n (%), n = 40 | 0/1 | 6 (15.0)/34 (85.0) |
| Bilirubinostasis, n (%), n = 40 | 0/1/2/3 | 14 (35.0)/18 (45.0)/1 (2.5)/7 (17.5) |
| Ballooning, n (%), n = 40 | 0/1 | 27 (37.5)/13 (32.5) |
| Giant mitochondria, n (%), n = 37 | 0/1 | 32 (86.5)/5 (13.5) |
| PMN infiltration, n (%), n = 41 | 0/1/2 | 9 (22.0)/18 (43.9)/14 (34.1) |
| Inflammatory grade, n (%), n = 41 | 0/1/2 | 11 (26.8)/27 (65.9)/3 (7.3) |
| Clinical scores and outcome | ||
| MELD, median (range), n = 72 | 23.8 (11.7–43.0) | |
| MELD > 21, n (%) | 54 (75) | |
| Child-Pugh stage, n (%), n = 71 | A/B/C | 1 (1.4)/22 (31.0)/48 (67.6) |
Antibiotics include prophylactic antibiotics. Values are presented as median (range or *interquartile range) for continuous variables or number (percentage) for categorical variables. Percentages are calculated based on the actual number of patients in each group where the respective data was available. The number of subjects for which the respective data was available is indicated in the first column. Fibrosis stage, 0 no fibrosis, 1 portal fibrosis, 2 expansive periportal fibrosis, 3 bridging fibrosis, 4 cirrhosis. Lobular fibrosis, 0 no fibrosis, 1 zone 3 (centrilobular) fibrosis, 2 zone 2 + 3 (midzonal) fibrosis, 3 panlobular fibrosis. Pericellular fibrosis, 0 absent, 1 present. Steatosis, 1 mild <33%, 2 moderate <33–66%, 3 marked >66%. Mallory bodies, 0 absent, 1 present. Bilirubinostasis, 0 no, 1 hepato-canalicular, 2 cholangiolar, 3 both. Ballooning, 0 occasional hepatocellular, 1 marked hepatocellular, 2 none present. Megamitochondria, 0 absent, 1 present. PMN infiltration, 0 no, 1 mild, 2 severe. Inflammation, 0 no, 1 mild, 2 severe.
BMI, body mass index; AST, aspartate aminotransferase; ALT, alanine aminotransferase; INR, international-normalized ratio; GGT, gamma-glutamyl transferase; MELD, model for end-stage liver disease; PMN, polymorphonuclear infiltration.
Figure 1.Intestinal bacteria correlate with clinical parameters in alcoholic hepatitis.
Figure 2.Association of disease severity with the intestinal microbiota.
Figure 3.Association of antibiotic treatment with intestinal bacteria.
Figure 4.Association of steroid treatment with intestinal bacteria.
Figure 5.Liver histology features associated with the intestinal microbiota.