4.5 Article

Gastrointestinal Surgery for Inflammatory Bowel Disease Persistently Lowers Microbiome and Metabolome Diversity

Journal

INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASES
Volume 27, Issue 5, Pages 603-616

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/ibd/izaa262

Keywords

inflammatory bowel disease; gut microbiome; intestinal surgery; metagenomics; metabolomics

Funding

  1. UCSD [1KL2TR001444]
  2. NIDDK [1K23DK123406, T32DK007202, P30 DK120515]
  3. Microbial Science Initiative Graduate Research Fellowship and Seed Grant by UC San Diego Center for Microbiome Innovation
  4. Technical University of Denmark [NNF10CC1016517]
  5. Janssen Human Microbiome Initiative
  6. Clinical and Translational Science Award grant [UL1-TR-001442]
  7. Novo Nordisk Foundation Center for Biosustainability

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study investigated microbiome and metabolome changes after different surgeries for IBD, finding that surgeries reduce diversity in the gut microbiome and metabolome of patients, with these changes potentially persisting over time. Surgery further destabilizes the microbiome over time, indicating a different level of instability compared to the microbiome of IBD patients.
Background: Many studies have investigated the role of the microbiome in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but few have focused on surgery specifically or its consequences on the metabolome that may differ by surgery type and require longitudinal sampling. Our objective was to characterize and contrast microbiome and metabolome changes after different surgeries for IBD, including ileocolonic resection and colectomy. Methods: The UC San Diego IBD Biobank was used to prospectively collect 332 stool samples from 129 subjects (50 ulcerative colitis; 79 Crohn's disease). Of these, 21 with Crohn's disease had ileocolonic resections, and 17 had colectomies. We used shotgun metagenomics and untargeted liquid chromatography followed by tandem mass spectrometry metabolomics to characterize the microbiomes and metabolomes of these patients up to 24 months after the initial sampling. Results: The species diversity and metabolite diversity both differed significantly among groups (species diversity: Mann-Whitney U test P value=7.8e-17; metabolomics, P-value=0.0043). Escherichia coli in particular expanded dramatically in relative abundance in subjects undergoing surgery. The species profile was better able to classify subjects according to surgery status than the metabolite profile (average precision 0.80 vs 0.68). Conclusions: Intestinal surgeries seem to reduce the diversity of the gut microbiome and metabolome in IBD patients, and these changes may persist. Surgery also further destabilizes the microbiome (but not the metabolome) over time, even relative to the previously established instability in the microbiome of IBD patients. These long-term effects and their consequences for health outcomes need to be studied in prospective longitudinal trials linked to microbiome-involved phenotypes.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available