| Literature DB >> 32958481 |
Karen T Elvers1, Victoria J Wilson2, Ashley Hammond2, Lorna Duncan2, Alyson L Huntley2, Alastair D Hay2, Esther T van der Werf3,4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: The gut microbiota influences many aspects of human health. We investigated the magnitude and duration of changes in gut microbiota in response to antibiotics commonly prescribed in UK primary care.Entities:
Keywords: microbiology; primary care; respiratory infections; urinary tract infections
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32958481 PMCID: PMC7507860 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035677
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
PICOS criteria for inclusion and exclusion of studies
| Parameter | Inclusion | Exclusion |
| Participants | Human adults and children | Animals, in vitro |
| Intervention | Specific antibiotics of interest prescribed in primary care | Other antibiotics |
| Comparator | Negative controls or other antibiotics | None |
| Outcomes | Changes in gut microbiota, total numbers, diversity and composition; time taken to recover | Antimicrobial resistance |
| Study design | All study types | None |
Summary of studies included in the review
| Study ID | Country | Design | Population | Setting | Infection | Antibiotic of interest (and dosage) | Sample and analysis | Primary outcome | Results |
| De La Cochetière | France | Cohort | N=6 adults | Volunteers | Healthy | Amoxicillin (500 mg three times a day for 5 days) | Faecal samples; 16S rRNA PCR and TTGE gel analysis and sequence analysis | To assess the ability of the human faecal microbiota to return to its original dominant species profile after a 5-day course of amoxicillin | Similarity indices of the TTGE profiles on D1 ranged from 93% to 99%; on D3 62%–82% and D4 46%–94%. On D30 and D60, these had raised back to 65%–95% and 66%–98%, respectively. Bands excised from the gel related to |
| Monreal | Brazil | Prospective | N=42 adults; 20 controls | Emergency department; blood donor centres | Bacterial respiratory infections (sinusitis, pneumonia) | Amoxicillin | Faecal samples analysed by culture and CFU on blood agar | Investigated the influence of respiratory tract infections and of amoxicillin therapy on the normal intestinal microbiota of patients | Concentrations of |
| Pallav | USA | RCT | N=24; 8 with amoxicillin, 8 controls, 8 other | Clinical and translational science centre | Healthy | Amoxicillin 250 mg three times a day for 7 days | 16S rRNA gene sequencing region ns Roche 454 GS FLX Titanium GreenGenes/RDP/NCBI Database | Effect of amoxicillin vs controls | The genera that are most abundant are |
| Abeles | USA | Cohort of unrelated cohabiting individuals randomly assigned | N=56 adults | University campus | Self-reported health status | Amoxicillin 500 mg twice daily for 3 and 7 days | 16S rRNA amplified from DNA using QIAGEN stool Mini Kit; sequencing | Effects of commonly prescribed antibiotics on microbiota | Microbiota grew more dissimilar over time but not significant. Most abundant taxa in gut were Bacteroidaceae, Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococcaceae. Lachnospiraceae, Veillonellaceae, Bacteroidales and Porphyromonadaceae were significantly decreased. Fusobacteriaceae increased. Bifidobacteriales and Erysipelotrichaecae initially decreased. There were sustained reductions in microbiome diversity in response to amoxicillin over 6 months. |
| Mangin | Chile | Study trial | N=42 infants; 31 with treatment | Health centre | Acute bronchitis | Amoxicillin 50 mg/kg/day in three daily doses for 7 days | Faecal; real-time PCR for | To investigate the quantitative and qualitative changes occurring in the faecal bifidobacterial populations in 18-month children after a 1-week amoxicillin treatment | Total bacteria and numbers of Bifidobacteria were not significantly altered by amoxicillin treatment. However, treatment changed species diversity, a complete disappearance of |
| Christensson | Sweden | Randomised double-blind parallel multicentre trial | N=84 adults; 44 with treatment (38/44 completed) | Outpatients | Lower respiratory tract infection | Amoxicillin 250 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal; cultured aerobically and anaerobically in broth to ID pathogenic microorganism and on selective plates for analysis of microflora changes | To compare cefaclor and amoxicillin as treatment for lower respiratory tract infections and in their ability to influence colonisation resistance | No change in abundance of |
| Brismar | Sweden | Single blind randomised trial | N=20 adults; 10 with treatment | Not specified | Healthy volunteers | Amoxicillin 500 mg every 8 hours for 7 days | Faecal; selective media, MICs, beta lactamase activity | To study the oral and intestinal microflora before, during and after administration of cefpodoxime proxetil and amoxicillin | Numbers of aerobic intestinal microflora were slightly affected by amoxicillin administration. A minor decrease in numbers of streptococci and staphylococci, an over growth of |
| Edlund | Sweden | Cohort | N=44 adults, 10 with treatment | Not specified | Not specified | Amoxicillin 500 mg t.i.d for 7 days | Faecal; serial dilutions and selective plating aerobic and anaerobic | The investigation was focused on drug concentrations in faeces, beta lactamase production by the intestinal microflora, alterations in the microflora and susceptibility patterns | Administration of amoxicillin affected the aerobic intestinal microflora to a minor extent. There was an overgrowth of |
| Ladirat | The Netherlands | Double-blinded randomised parallel intervention study | N=12 adults (two not analysed due to non-compliance) | Not specified | Healthy volunteers | Amoxicillin 375 mg three times daily for 5 days | Faecal; Intestinal (I)-Chip microarray, total bacteria and | Determined the effects of prebiotic intake on the microbiota of healthy adult subjects during and after treatment with amoxicillin | Total bacteria and |
| Floor | The Netherlands | Randomised double-blind study | N=80 adults | Recruited from 9 general practices | Chronic bronchitis with purulent sputum | Amoxicillin, 500 mg three times a day for 7 days | Faecal; cultured aerobically and anaerobically on selective media, testing for | Effect of both amoxicillin and loracarbef on oropharyngeal and intestinal microflora | No change in abundance of anaerobic bacteria or |
| Korpela | Finland | Part of a cohort from larger probiotic trial | N=236 children; 142 donated faecal samples | Day-care centres | Antibiotic use for respiratory (88%) other mainly urinary (5%) | Penicillins (amoxicillin with or without clavulanic acid and penicillin V), macrolides (azithromycin and clarithromycin) and sulphonamide–trimethoprim | Faecal by 16S rRNA and sequence analysis; operational taxonomic unit (OTU); culture-based antibiotic sensitivity testing | Use of phylogenetics, metagenomics and antibiotic use on microbiota composition and metabolism | Macrolide use reduced abundance of Actinobacteria and increased |
| Mangin | France | Trial | N=18 treated, no controls | Study centre | Healthy volunteers | 875/125 mg oral dose of amoxicillin/clavulanic acid twice a day for 5 days | Faecal samples, real-time PCR TTGE | Amoxicillin-clavulanic acid treatment on total bacteria and on | Total bacterial concentrations as well as bifidobacteria concentrations were significantly reduced after antibiotic treatment. The mean similarity percentages of TTGE bacteria and TTGE bifidobacteria profiles were significantly reduced. Occurrence of |
| Forssten | Finland | Randomised double-blind placebo controlled parallel study | N=80 adults; 40:40 probiotic:placebo | Volunteers | Healthy | Augmentin (875 mg amoxicillin and 125 mg clavulanate) for 7 days | Faecal samples; qPCR for specific microbial groups | To investigate the effect of a specific combination of probiotic strains on the incidence of antibiotic-induced microbiota disturbances | Generally, |
| Young | USA | Case report | N=1 adult male | Not detailed | Acute sinusitis | Amoxicillin-clavulanic acid (875 and 125 mg, respectively, twice daily for 10 days) | Faecal sample 16S rRNA PCR and sequencing and analysis | Molecular phylogenetic survey of the faecal microbiota from a patient who developed antibiotic-associated diarrhoea during the administration of a broad-spectrum antibiotic | D0, sequences clustered within four bacterial groups: |
| Engelbrekston | USA | Probiotic-antibiotic study arm | N=40 adults | Not specified | Healthy volunteers | Agumentin (amoxicillin and clavulanic acid), 875 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal; TRF analysis, PCR and enzyme digest, bacterial culturing on selective media for enumeration of different species | Analysis of faecal terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism data for treatment effects of probiotic treatment concurrent with antibiotic therapy | There was large subject-to-subject variability. Subjects fell into two categories: those with stable baseline microbiota and those where it varied significantly. Antibiotics had a significant effect on faecal microbiota across all subjects. Culture data also had large variation in counts. Increasing trends were visible in |
| Lode | Germany | Volunteers | N=12 adults | Not specified | Healthy | Amoxicillin/clavulanic acid 1000 mg (750:125 mg, respectively) daily | Faecal; culture on selective agar, colonies counted, isolated and identified to genus level | Investigate the ecological effects of linezolid, compared with those of amoxicillin/clavulanic acid, on the intestinal human microflora | Amoxicillin/Clavulanic acid was associated with significant increase in numbers of enterococci and |
| Kabbani | USA | Single-centre, open-label, randomised controlled | N=49, 12 antiobiotic treated, 12 controls | Clinical and translational science centre | Healthy volunteers | Amoxicillin/clavulanate 875/125 mg twice daily for 7 days | 16S rRNA gene sequencing | To compare and contrast the effects of a probiotic and antibiotic, the main endpoint was change from baseline in the composition of the gut microbiota | Lower diversity (OTUs, Chao index) d10 and d21. Increased abundance of |
| Stewardson | Switzerland | Prospective cohort | N=40 adults; 10 nitrofuratonin | Ambulatory care | Lower UTI | Nitrofuratonin (100 mg twice daily for 5 days) | Faecal by 16S rRNA and sequence analysis; OTU | Compare the effects of ciprofloxacin and nitrofurantoin on the gut microbiota composition of non-hospitalised patients with UTIs compared with patients without antibiotic exposure and household contacts of patients receiving ciprofloxacin | Ciprofloxacin caused changes in a number of genus of gut bacteria. Substantial recovery after 4 weeks. Nitrofuratonin treatment correlated with a non-significant increase in |
| Vervoort | Belgium and Poland | Prospective cohort | N=13; 5 controls | Ambulatory patients visiting GPs | Uncomplicated UTI | Nitrofurantoin (100 mg three times daily for 3–15 days) | Faecal; 16S rDNA PCR, sequencing and analysis | The impact of nitrofurantoin treatment on the gastrointestinal flora of patients with uncomplicated UTIs | Nitrofurantoin treatment did not significantly impact on the faecal microbiota other than a temporary increase in the Actinobacteria phylum ( |
| Mavromanolakis | Greece | Randomised | N=21 women; 7 with treatment | Not specified | UTI (at least three episodes caused by Enterobacteriaceae in the preceding 12 months) | Nitrofurantoin (100 mg daily for 30 days) | Faecal samples (and urine) cultured and plated on selective agar, API test kits for identification | Impact of doses of norfloxacin, trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole and nitrofurantoin on aerobic bowel flora | Before antibiotic treatment, all stools contained Enterobacteriaceae and |
| Heimdahl & Nord (1983) | Sweden | Trial | N=10 | Not specified | Healthy volunteers | Doxycycline 100 mg daily for 7 days | Faecal culture on selective media | Effect of doxycycline on the normal human flora and on colonisation of the oral cavity and colon | No change in abundance of |
| Walker | USA | RCT | N=69 adult; 55 analysed | Clinic | Periodontitis | 20 mg doxycycline | Faecal samples plated on a number of selective agar and incubated for CFU counts | To determine if a 9-month regimen of suboptimal doxycycline had an effect on either the intestinal or the vaginal microflora | The only statistically significant differences between the two treatment groups occurred in the doxycycline-resistant counts at the baseline sample. No between-treatment differences were detected at 3-month or 9-month period either in the predominant bacterial taxa or in antibiotic susceptibilities |
| Matto | Finland | Not specified | N=19; 10 controls | Not specified | Not specified | Doxycycline 150 mg daily for 10 days with probiotic | Faecal 16S rRNA PCR for | To evaluate the influence of doxycycline therapy on the composition and antibiotic susceptibility of intestinal bifidobacteria | |
| Rashid | Sweden | Double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, parallel group study | N=34, 17 treated, 17 controls | Clinical trial unit | Healthy volunteers | Doxycycline 40 mg capsules orally once daily | Culture on selective media aerobic and anaerobic | Primary objective of this study was to assess the impact of antimicrobial treatment on the oropharyngeal and intestinal microflora during and after administration of 40 mg doxycycline capsule given once daily to healthy volunteers | Doxycycline was detectable in stool up to 16 weeks. No changes in abundance (>2 log CFU/g) of |
| Brismar | Sweden | Cohort study | N=10 adults | Not specified | Healthy volunteers | Clarithromycin 250 mg twice daily for 7 days | Culture on selective and non-selective agar | To compare the effect of clarithromycin and erythromycin on the normal flora | Clarithromycin decreased the numbers of |
| Edlund | Sweden | Healthy volunteers | N=12 male adult | Not specified | Healthy | Clarithromycin 500 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal; inhibition assay, culture on selective and non-selective agar | To investigate the ecological effects of moxifloxacin with those of clarithromycin on the intestinal human microflora | Clarithromycin significantly reduced |
| Edlund | Sweden | Randomised double-blind controlled study | N=20 adults | Not specified | Healthy | Clarithromycin 500 mg for 10 days | Faecal; culture on selective agar aerobic and anaerobic, Gram stain and biochemical tests, gas liquid chromatography | Assess the impact of antibiotic on intestinal microflora | Moderate disturbances in aerobic intestinal microflora, number of |
| Matute | The Netherlands | Double blind-randomised trial | N=18, 6 treatment, 6 controls | Medical centre | Healthy volunteers | Clarithromycin 500 mg twice a day orally for 7 days | Faecal culture on selective agar aerobic and anaerobic | To compare the effect of 3-day, twice daily clarithromycin and with placebo on the faecal microflora | No change in abundance of |
| Heimdahl & Nord (1979) | Sweden | Trial | N=20, 10 with phenoxymethylpenicillin | Research Institute | Healthy volunteers | Phenoxymethylpenicillin 800 mg as a loading dose, 800 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal culture on selective media under aerobic and anaerobic conditions. Bacterial identification by API strips | Effect of phenoxymethylpenicillin (and clindamycin) on the aerobic and anaerobic microflora in the human mouth, throat and colon | No change in abundance of |
| Adamsson | Sweden | Healthy volunteers | N=20 adults; 10 with treatment | Not specified | Healthy | Phenoxymethylpenicillin 1000 mg twice a day for 10 days | Faecal antimicrobial assay and culture | To investigate the ecological effects of phenoxymethylpenicillin, on the oropharyngeal and intestinal human microflora | No change in abundance of |
| Heimdahl & Nord (1982) | Sweden | Trial | N=10 | Research institute | Healthy volunteers | Erythromycin stearate was given orally in doses of 500 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal specimens were taken up to 16 days for cultivation of aerobic and anaerobic bacteria | The impact of erythromycin administration on the normal human flora and on colonisation of the oral cavity, throat and colon | Suppression of both aerobic and anaerobic faecal flora occurred. All subjects were colonised by erythromycin-resistant enterobacteria, clostridia or yeasts in the colon. In aerobes, the number of enterobacteria, enterococci and streptococci were reduced. In anaerobes, no change in abundance of |
| Brismar | Sweden | Cohort study | N=10 adults | Not specified | Healthy | Erythromycin 1000 mg twice daily for 7 days | Faecal culture on selective media | Compare the effect of clarithromycin and erythromycin on intestinal microflora | Changes in the intestinal aerobic and anaerobic microflora. Streptococci eliminated, enterobacteria strongly suppressed. Minor reduction in enterococci and corynebacterial. Staphylococci and |
CFU, colony-forming unit; GPs, general practitioners; RCT, randomised controlled trial; TTGE, temporal temperature gradient gel electrophoresis; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart for study selection.
Figure 2Overall risk of bias assessment, for case studies (A), cohort studies (B) and trials (C).
Impact of amoxicillin on the gastrointestinal microflora
| Study | Dose (mg/day) | Days of administration | Number of patients | Impact on | Overgrowth | |||||||
| Aerobic GP cocci | Enterobacteria | Anaerobic | ||||||||||
| Christensson | 250×3 | 7 | 38 | No change | isolated 4 patients | Increase | Increase | Increase | Increase | Isolated two patients | Isolated 10 patients | |
| Floor | 500×3 | 7 | 40 | Slight change | – | Increase | No change | – | – | – | – | Increase |
| Mangin | 50/kg/day | 7 | 31 | – | – | – | – | – | Changes in diversity | – | – | – |
| Monreal | – | – | 22 | – | – | – | – | Decrease | Decrease | Decrease | – | – |
| Ladirat | 375×3 | 5 | 12 | – | – | Overgrowth | – | – | Decrease | – | – | – |
| Pallav | 250×3 | 7 | 8 | – | – | Increase | Decrease | – | – | Increase | – | – |
| Brismar | 500×3 | 7 | 10 | Minor decrease | – | Increase | No change | No change | No change | No change | None | No change |
| Edlund | 500×3 | 7 | 10 | – | – | Overgrowth | – | No change | No change | No change | No change | No change |
| De La Cochetiere | 500×3 | 6 | 5 | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Abeles | 500×2 | 3/6 | 6/6 | Increase | Diminished even after 6 months | Decrease then increase | Decrease | |||||
*This paper measured similarity indices of TGGE profiles and showed shifts in dominant species on antibiotic treatment.
†Also a reduction in diversity.
–, not reported; GP, gram positive; TTGE, temporal temperature gradient gel electrophoresis.
Impact of amoxicillin with clavulanic acid on the gastrointestinal microflora.
| Study | Dose | Days of administration | Number of patients | Impact on | Overgrowth | |||||||
| Aerobic GP cocci | Enterobacteria incl. | Anaerobic cocci | Bifidobacteria | |||||||||
| Lode | 875/125 | 7 | 12 | Increase | – | Increase | Little change | Decrease | Decrease | Little change | Decrease | |
| Young & Schmidt (2004)* | 875/125×2 | 10 | 1 | – | – | Clusters present | – | – | Clusters present | Clusters present | Two clusters | |
| Engelbrektson | 875/?x2 | 7 | 32 | – | – | Increase | – | No trend | No trend | Increase | No trend | |
| Forssten | 875/125 | 7 | 80 | Increased | Not affected in probiotic group | Decreased in the placebo group | Decreased | |||||
| Korpela | – | – | 142 | Slight decrease | Two fold elevated Parabacteroides | |||||||
| Kabbani | 875/125×2 | 7 | 12 | Increase | Increased | Decreased | Decreased | Increased | Decreased | |||
| Mangin | 875/125×2 | 5 | 18 | Increased | Decreased | |||||||
*This paper reported shifts in the representation of the major bacterial groups.
†Probiotic also given.
‡And penicillin V.
GP, gram positive.