| Literature DB >> 35468617 |
Abstract
Urine is no longer considered to be sterile. After the existence of the microbiome was revealed through metagenomic analysis using next-generation sequencing, the relationship between characteristics of the microbiome and diseases have been studied and published in various journals. A microbiome exists in the urinary tract and is associated with urinary tract infection, malignancy of the genitourinary tract, and lower urinary tract symptoms. Based on the urine sampling method, sampling site, culture method, and sex, the characteristics of the microbiome vary. Most of the Lactobacillus species are identified mainly in women, and various other species are identified in men. These microorganisms can cause or prevent various diseases. Variations in the microbiome are seen in those with and without disease, and an asymptomatic status does not indicate the absence of microbes. This microbiome has been implicated in a variety of lower urinary tract symptoms and diseases, in particular, overactive bladder. The microbiome differs between patients with urgency and urge urinary incontinence and healthy individuals. There are many aspects of the microbiome yet to be studied in relation to other lower urinary tract symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarker; Microbiota; Overactive bladder
Year: 2022 PMID: 35468617 PMCID: PMC9537439 DOI: 10.5213/inj.2244016.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int Neurourol J ISSN: 2093-4777 Impact factor: 3.038
Fig. 1.Differences in urine collection methods in relation to the urobiome (invasiveness and contamination). In the case of suprapubic puncture, only the microbiome of the bladder was identified, and the invasiveness was the highest. Conversely, self-voiding methods (first catch urine, midstream urine, and clean catch urine) are less invasive but are contaminated with microbiota from the urethral flora.
Strains identified in the urobiome according to sex and urine collection method
| Sex | Study | No. of patients | Urine collection method | Urobiome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Female | Siddiqui et al. [ | 8 | CCU |
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| Wolfe et al. [ | 12 | CCU, TUC, SPA |
| |
| Fouts et al. [ | 15 | MSU |
| |
| Lewis et al. [ | 10 | CCU |
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| Hilt et al. [ | 24 | TUC |
| |
| Pearce et al. [ | 58 | TUC |
| |
| Karstens et al. [ | 10 | TUC |
| |
| Thomas-White et al. [ | 60 | TUC |
| |
| Wu et al. [ | 25 | TUC |
| |
| Gottschick et al. [ | 49 | MSU |
| |
| Abernethy et al. [ | 20 | TUC |
| |
| Wang et al. [ | 21 | MSU |
| |
| Rani et al. [ | 5 | MSU |
| |
| Komesu et al. [ | 84 | TUC |
| |
| Meriwether et al. [ | 18 | MSU |
| |
| Bresler et al. [ | 20 | MSU |
| |
| Liu et al. [ | 3 | TUC |
| |
| Male | Fouts et al. [ | 11 | MSU |
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| Nelson et al. [ | 18 | FCU |
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| Lewis et al. [ | 6 | CCU |
| |
| Rani et al. [ | 3 | MSU |
| |
| Wu et al. [ | 18 | MSU |
| |
| Bučević Popović et al. [ | 19 | MSU |
| |
| Kassiri et al. [ | 10 | TUC |
| |
| Xie et al. [ | 21 | NA |
| |
| Liu et al. [ | 9 | TUC |
|
Lactobacillus was mainly identified in women, despite the difference in the sampling methods.
CCU, clean catch urine; TUC, transurethral catheter; SPA, suprapubic aspirate; MSU, midstream urine; FCU, first catch urine; NA, not available.
Urinary biomarkers of overactive bladder
| Type | Urinary biomarker in OAB | Source | Function | Levels |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neurotrophin | NGF | Urothelium and smooth muscle cell | Induce bladder overactivity | Increased in OAB |
| BDNF | ||||
| Genomics | miRNA | RNA | Biomarker for bladder dysfunction and storage symptoms after surgery | Marker for fibrosis and BOO |
| Distinguish between detrusor overactivity and detrusor underactivity | ||||
| Related to bladder outlet obstruction relief moment and bladder fibrotic pathway | ||||
| For clinical application, it is difficult to obtain tissue because it is invasive | ||||
| Urinary b3-adrenoceptor (B3-AR) | Genetic variation in B3-AR lead to impair detrusor relaxation | |||
| Compound | Urinary ATP | Urothelium | Bladder stretch or inflammation transduce bladder information into suburothelial nerve fibers | Increased in OAB |
| Immunity | Antimicrobial peptide | Host innate immunity | Related to UTI risk | Increased in OAB |
| Prostaglandin E2 | Inflammatory marker | Not clear in OAB but changes in detrusor state | Increased in OAB decreased in DU | |
| It is attracting attention as a treatment target | ||||
| Microorganism | Urinary microbiota | Normal flora or gut or vagina | Closely related UUI, SUI, UTI, IC/BPS or CP/CPPS | Closely related to UUI |
NGF, nerve growth factor; BDNF, brain-derived neutrophic factor; OAB, overactive bladder; miRNA, micro ribonucleic acid; BOO, bladder outlet obstruction; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; UTI, urinary tract infection; DU, detrusor underactivity; UUI, urge urinary incontinence; SUI, stress urinary incontinence; IC/BPS, interstitial cystitis/ bladder pain syndrome; CP/CPPS, chronic prostatitis/chronic pelvic pain syndrome.
Microbial strains identified in urine samples collected from individuals with overactive bladder symptoms
| Symptom | Study | Year | Microbial strains |
|---|---|---|---|
| Frequency | Burnett et al. [ | 2021 | Few related studies in UTI, |
| Nocturia | Holland et al. [ | 2020 | Urinary OUT related with |
| Urgency | Okamoto et al. [ | 2021 | |
| Urge incontinence | Pearce et al. [ | 2014 | Increased |
| Thomas-White et al. [ | 2020 | After vaginal estrogen therapy, decreased diversity and increased | |
| Abbasian et al. [ | 2019 | ||
| Karstens et al. [ | 2016 | 14 Bacterial species identification in healthy and UUI decreased diversity has effects to symptom severity |
UTI, urinary tract infection; UUI, urge urinary incontinence; ATP, adenosine triphosphate.