| Literature DB >> 35330643 |
Flavio De Maio1, Danilo Buonsenso2,3,4, Delia Mercedes Bianco2, Martina Giaimo3, Bruno Fosso5, Francesca Romana Monzo1, Michela Sali1,2, Brunella Posteraro1,6, Piero Valentini3,4, Maurizio Sanguinetti1,2.
Abstract
Bronchiolitis due to respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) or non-RSV agents is a health-menacing lower respiratory tract (LRT) disease of infants. Whereas RSV causes more severe disease than other viral agents may, genus-dominant fecal microbiota profiles have been identified in US hospitalized infants with bronchiolitis. We investigated the fecal microbiota composition of infants admitted to an Italian hospital with acute RSV (25/37 [67.6%]; group I) or non-RSV (12/37 [32.4%]; group II) bronchiolitis, and the relationship of fecal microbiota characteristics with the clinical characteristics of infants. Group I and group II infants differed significantly (24/25 [96.0%] versus 5/12 [41.7%]; P = 0.001) regarding 90% oxygen saturation (SpO2), which is an increased respiratory effort hallmark. Accordingly, impaired feeding in infants from group I was significantly more frequent than in infants from group II (19/25 [76.0%] versus 4/12 [33.3%]; P = 0.04). Conversely, the median (IQR) length of stay was not significantly different between the two groups (seven [3-14] for group I versus five [5-10] for group II; P = 0.11). The 16S ribosomal RNA V3-V4 region amplification of infants' fecal samples resulted in 299 annotated amplicon sequence variants. Based on alpha- and beta-diversity microbiota downstream analyses, group I and group II infants had similar bacterial communities in their samples. Additionally, comparing infants having <90% SpO2 (n = 29) with infants having ≥90% SpO2 (n = 8) showed that well-known dominant genera (Bacteroides, Bifidobacterium, Escherichia/Shigella, and Enterobacter/Veillonella) were differently, but not significantly (P = 0.44, P = 0.71, P = 0.98, and P = 0.41, respectively) abundant between the two subgroups. Overall, we showed that, regardless of RSV or non-RSV bronchiolitis etiology, no fecal microbiota-composing bacteria could be associated with the severity of acute bronchiolitis in infants. Larger and longitudinally conducted studies will be necessary to confirm these findings.Entities:
Keywords: acute bronchiolitis; fecal microbiota; infants; respiratory effort; respiratory syncytial virus; severe illness
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35330643 PMCID: PMC8940166 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2022.815715
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Characteristics of 37 infants with RSV or non-RSV bronchiolitis as assessed by nasopharyngeal secretion PCR testing.
| Characteristics | RSV bronchiolitis group ( | Non-RSV bronchiolitis group ( |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographics | |||
| Age, months, mean (SD) | 2.16 (0.44) | 3.83 (0.88) | 0.05 |
| Male sex | 17 (68.0) | 6 (50.0) | 0.24 |
| Caucasian race | 23 (92.0) | 12 (100) | 0.45 |
| Birth history | |||
| Cesarean delivery | 11 (44.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.32 |
| Prematurity (32–37 weeks) | 4 (16.0) | 2 (16.7) | 0.65 |
| ED presentation signs/symptoms | |||
| Fever | 8 (32.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.12 |
| Dyspnea | 24 (96.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.001 |
| Rhinitis | 13 (52.0) | 5 (41.7) | 0.41 |
| Increased respiratory effort indices | |||
| Retractions | 20 (80.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.0001 |
| Wheezes/Crackles (rales) | 22 (88.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.0001 |
| Tachypnea | 10 (40.0) | 3 (25.0) | 0.0001 |
| Oxygen saturation (SpO2) <90% | 24 (96.0) | 5 (41.7) | 0.001 |
| Impaired feeding | 19 (76.0) | 4 (33.3) | 0.04 |
| (Co)infection by viruses other than RSV | |||
| Rhinovirus | 4 (16.0) | 6 (50.0) | 0.021 |
| Influenza virus | 0 (0.0) | 2 (16.7) | 0.026 |
| Systemic antibiotic use after bronchiolitis diagnosis | 13 (52.0) | 7 (58.3) | 0.49 |
| ICU and intubation | |||
| No ICU | 21 (84.0) | 12 (100) | 0.19 |
| ICU without intubation | 2 (8.0) | 0 (0.0) | — |
| ICU with intubation | 2 (8.0) | 0 (0.0) | — |
| LOS, days, median (IQR) | 7 (3–14) | 5 (5–10) | 0.11 |
Data are no. (%) of infants unless otherwise indicated. —, not computed.
ED, emergency department; ICU, intensive care unit; IQR, interquartile range; LOS, length of hospital stay; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; RSV, respiratory syncytial virus; SD, standard deviation; SpO2, saturation of peripheral oxygen.
Of listed indices, SpO2 <90% value for each infant was determined through repeated measurements by pulse oximetry.
According to PCR testing performed on the nasopharyngeal secretions used to determine the RSV or non-RSV etiology of bronchiolitis.
Diagnosis was concomitant with the fecal sampling that was, indeed, obtained before patients were treated with antibiotics (see text for details).
Figure 1Alpha-diversity (A) and beta-diversity (B) analyses of fecal bacterial communities from hospitalized infants with acute bronchiolitis. In (A), species richness, equitability, and phylogenetic diversity (mean ± standard deviation) values were compared between RSV-positive (blue-colored) and RSV-negative (yellow-colored) infants’ groups, respectively. In each boxplot, outliers are shown. Except for the phylogenetic diversity index that shows no difference, the observed species, inverse Simpson, and Pielou’s evenness indices are slightly (but not significantly) lower in RSV-positive than in RSV-negative infants. In (B), Bray–Curtis or weighted UniFrac compositional-based distances were computed for RSV-positive (blue-colored) and RSV-negative (yellow-colored) infants’ groups, respectively. The principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) results are presented as two-dimensional ordination plots, which were generated using two (axis1 and axis2) principal coordinates. These results show no significant separation between RSV-positive and RSV-negative infants’ groups. In both (A, B), “positive” and “negative” indicate infants whose nasopharyngeal samples were, respectively, positive for RSV or negative for RSV at molecular testing (see text for details). RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.
Figure 2Relative abundances of bacterial taxa composing the fecal bacterial communities from hospitalized infants with acute bronchiolitis. For RSV-positive and RSV-negative infants’ groups, the proportions of major bacterial phyla (A) and top-20 bacterial genera (B) were computed, normalized, and presented as stacked-bar plots per group of (A) or single (B) fecal samples (here indicated with designation codes, e.g., bronchiolitis (BRO)-pediatrics (PED)03), respectively. Shown is the phyla Actinobacteria, Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes, and Proteobacteria along with other phyla, which include Fusobacteria, Tenericutes, and Verrucomicrobia. In each plot (A) or group of plots (B), “positive” and “negative” indicate infants whose nasopharyngeal samples were, respectively, positive for RSV or negative for RSV at molecular testing (see text for details). RSV, respiratory syncytial virus.