| Literature DB >> 35600606 |
Natural Chu1, Juliana C N Chan1,2,3,4, Elaine Chow1,4.
Abstract
Pharmacomicrobiomics refers to the interactions between foreign compounds and the gut microbiome resulting in heterogeneous efficacy, side effects, and toxicity of the compound concerned. Glucose lowering drugs reduce blood glucose by modulating insulin secretion and its actions as well as redistributing energy disposal. Apart from genetic, ecological, and lifestyle factors, maintaining an equilibrium of the whole gut microbiome has been shown to improve human health. Microbial fingerprinting using faecal samples indicated an 'invisible phenotype' due to different compositions of microbiota which might orchestrate the interactions between patients' phenotypes and their responses to glucose-lowering drugs. In this article, we summarize the current evidence on differences in composition of gut microbiota between individuals with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and healthy individuals, the disruption of the balance of beneficial and pathogenic microbiota was shown in patients with T2D and how Western Medicine (WM) and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) might re-shape the gut microbiota with benefits to the host immunity and metabolic health. We particularly highlighted the effects of both WM and TCM increase the relative abundance of health promoting bacteria, such as, Akkermansia muciniphila, Blautia, and Bifidobacterium adolescentis, and which have been implicated in type 2 diabetes (T2D). Several lines of evidence suggested that TCM might complement the efficacy of WM through alteration of microbiota which warrants further investigation in our pursuit of prevention and control of T2D.Entities:
Keywords: Akkermansia; diabetes; medication; microbiota; traditional Chinese medicine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35600606 PMCID: PMC9114736 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2022.857090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 6.055
Summary of the effects of western medicine on the composition of the gut microbiome in T2D patients.
| Drugs | Author (Years) | Patients | Periods | Study design | Effect of treatment on microbes | Additional remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Metformin | Wang et al., 2018 ( | 37 patients with T2D (18 treated with metformin and 19 treated with GLP-1 mimetics) | 6 weeks | Cross sectional study | Metformin | A higher abundance of |
| Metformin | Sun et al., 2018 ( | 22 patients with newly diagnosed T2D treated with metformin | 3 days | Intervention study | Metformin | Metformin improves obesity-induced glucose intolerance and insulin resistance through the gut microbiota |
| Metformin | Wu et al., 2017 ( | 40 patients with newly diagnosed T2D treated with metformin | 4-6 months | Randomized placebo controlled crossover study | Metformin | Decrease in HbA1c and fasting plasma glucose after the metformin treatment |
| Metformin | Cuesta-Zuluaga et al., 2017 ( | 28 patients with T2D (14 treated with metformin and 14 not-treated with metformin) and 84 without diabetes | Not mentioned | Cross-sectional case-control study | Metformin | There were significant differences in the comparison in β diversity of microbiome between metformin and non-metformin users |
| Acarbose | Gu et al., 2017 ( | 94 patients with newly diagnosed T2D treated with acarbose or glipizide | 3 months | Multicentre parallel comparison | Acarbose | Reductions in HbA1c, fasting, and postprandial plasma glucose in both treatment arms |
| Acarbose | Su et al., 2015 ( | 59 patients with T2D patients treated with acarbose 36 patients treated with other glucose-lowering drugs 55 healthy controls | 4 weeks | Cross-sectional case-control study | Acarbose | Acarbose significantly reduced lipopolysaccharides and prothrombin activator inhibitor-1 |
| GLP-1 mimetics | Shang et al., 2021 ( | 40 patients with T2D switched from metformin to liraglutide | 4 months | Observational study | Liraglutide | BMI, HbA1c, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR), fasting blood glucose, 2-hour postprandial blood glucose, and lipid profiles were significantly lower after liraglutide-treatment |
| GLP-1 mimetics | Wang et al., 2018 ( | 37 patients with T2D (18 treated with metformin and 19 treated with GLP-1 mimetics) | 6 weeks | Cross-sectional study | GLP1 | Patients receiving a GLP-1 agonist had higher |
| SGLT2i and Gliclazide | Bommel et al., 2019 ( | 44 metformin-treated patients with T2D randomized to either dapagliflozin or gliclazide | 12 weeks | Randomized double-blind, comparator-controlled, parallel-group trial | No change in microbiota with either dapagliflozin or gliclazide treatment | Both drugs improved glycaemic control with dapagliflozin reducing and gliclazide increasing fasting plasma insulin. |
GLP-1, Glucagon-like peptide-1.
Summary of the effects of traditional Chinese medicine on the composition of the gut microbiome in T2D patients.
| TCM | Year | Patients | Period | Study design | Microbes | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berberine | Zhang et al., 2020 ( | 409 Patients with T2D treated with either berberine alone, probiotic+berberine, probiotic alone or placebo. | 12 weeks | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Berberine ↓ | Berberine reduced HbA1c, fasting and postprandial plasma glucose, fasting plasma triglyceride, total and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol |
| GQD | Xu et al., 2015 ( | 187 patients with T2D treated with either GQD or placebo | 12 weeks | Randomized double-blinded placebo-controlled clinical trial | GQD ↑ | GQD reduced the mean fasting plasma glucose and HbA1c |
| AMC | Tong et al., 2018 ( | 100 patients with T2D treated with either the metformin or AMC | 12 weeks | Randomized, open labelled randomized study RCT | AMC ↑ | AMC reduced plasma glucose and lipids |
GQD, Gegen Qinlian Decoction; AMC, specifically designed herbal formula (no full name provided).
Figure 1The effects of Western Medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine in shaping the gut microbiota which may contribute to the control and prevention of type 2 diabetes (JQJT, JinQi Jiangtang; GQD, Gegen Qinlian Decoction; AMC, specifically designed herbal formula (no full name provided); GLP-1, Glucagon-like peptide-1.) In this review, summarized evidence suggested that both WM and TCM orchestrated different patterns on the microbiome, upward and downward arrows indicated an increase or decrease of certain microbiota by WM or TCM, and the particular microbiota underlined were possibly highlighted in the treatment of T2D.