| Literature DB >> 33396759 |
Rosa Escudero-Sánchez1, Manuel Ponce-Alonso2, Hugo Barragán-Prada3, María Isabel Morosini2, Rafael Cantón2, Javier Cobo1, Rosa Del Campo2.
Abstract
The aim was to describe the safety of indefinite administration of antibiotics, the so-called suppressive antibiotic therapy (SAT) and to provide insight into their impact on gut microbiota. 17 patients with SAT were recruited, providing a fecal sample. Bacterial composition was determined by 16S rDNA massive sequencing, and their viability was explored by PCR-DGGE with and without propidium monoazide. Presence of antibiotic multirresistant bacteria was explored through the culture of feces in selective media. High intra-individual variability in the genera distribution regardless of the antibiotic or antibiotic administration ingestion period, with few statistically significant differences detected by Bray-Curtis distance-based principle component analysis, permutational multivariate analysis of variance and linear discriminant analysis effect size analysis. However, the microbiota composition of patients treated with both beta-lactams and sulfonamides clustered by a heat map. Curiously, the detection of antibiotic resistant bacteria was almost anecdotic and CTX-M-15-producing E. coli were detected in two subjects. Our work demonstrates the overall clinical safety of SAT and the low rate of the selection of multidrug-resistant bacteria triggered by this therapy. We also describe the composition of intestinal microbiota under the indefinite use of antibiotics for the first time.Entities:
Keywords: PCR-DGGE; antibiotic multirresistant colonization; bacterial viability; gut microbiota; propidium monoazide; suppressive antibiotic therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33396759 PMCID: PMC7823557 DOI: 10.3390/genes12010041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096