Associations between acute gastrointestinal GvHD and the baseline gut microbiota of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant recipients and donors.
Cuining LiuD N FrankM HorchS ChauD IrE A HorchK TretinaKoen van BesienC A LozuponeV H NguyenPublished in: Bone marrow transplantation (2017)
Growing evidence suggests that host-microbiota interactions influence GvHD risk following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant. However, little is known about the influence of the transplant recipient's pre-conditioning microbiota nor the influence of the transplant donor's microbiota. Our study examines associations between acute gastrointestinal GvHD (agGvHD) and 16S rRNA fecal bacterial profiles in a prospective cohort of N=57 recipients before preparative conditioning, as well as N=22 of their paired HLA-matched sibling donors. On average, recipients had lower fecal bacterial diversity (P=0.0002) and different phylogenetic membership (UniFrac P=0.001) than the healthy transplant donors. Recipients with lower phylogenetic diversity had higher overall mortality rates (hazard ratio=0.37, P=0.008), but no statistically significant difference in agGvHD risk. In contrast, high bacterial donor diversity was associated with decreased agGvHD risk (odds ratio=0.12, P=0.038). Further investigation is warranted as to whether selection of hematopoietic stem cell transplant donors with high gut microbiota diversity and/or other specific compositional attributes may reduce agGvHD incidence, and by what mechanisms.
Keyphrases
- hematopoietic stem cell
- kidney transplantation
- liver failure
- allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
- respiratory failure
- drug induced
- cardiovascular disease
- stem cell transplantation
- type diabetes
- magnetic resonance imaging
- high dose
- low dose
- coronary artery disease
- contrast enhanced
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- mechanical ventilation