What Do We Know about the Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis? Is There a Role for Probiotics and Prebiotics?
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Cystic Fibrosis in the Gastrointestinal Tract
3. The Human Gut Microbiome
4. The CF Gut Microbiome
5. Intestinal Inflammation
6. Nutritional Management in CF
7. Clinical Significance of the CF Gut Microbiome
8. Microbiome Modulation with Probiotics
8.1. Mechanisms of Action
8.2. Probiotics in CF
9. Microbiome Modulation with Prebiotics
9.1. Mechanisms of Action
9.2. Prebiotics in CF
9.3. Microbiome Modulation with Diet
9.4. Diet in CF
10. Considerations for Clinical Application and Future Studies
11. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Year | Probiotic Preparation (Dose) | Study Design | Duration | Probiotic Participants | Primary Results | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1998 | L. rhamnosus strain GG (6 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Cross-over) | 6 months | 28 | Increased weight gain (placebo 2.7 ± 2.5%, probiotic 8.7 ± 8.1%, p < 0.05). Reduced risk of infections (infections requiring antibiotic treatment per child in 6 months, placebo 39 and 1.7 ± 0.3, probiotic 19 or 0.9 ± 0.6, (p < 0.05)). Reduction in abdominal pain (placebo = 6 patients with abdominal pain, probiotic = 1, p < 0.05). | [194] |
2007 | Lactobacillus GG (6 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Cross-over) | 6 months | 38 | Reduction in pulmonary exacerbations (median 1 vs. 2, range 4 vs. 4, median difference 1, CI 95% 0.5–1.5; p = 0.003). Reduction in hospital admissions (median 0 vs. 1, range 3 vs. 2, median difference 1, CI 95% 1.0–1.5; p = 0.001). Increase in FEV1 (3.6% ± 5.2 vs. 0.9% ± 5; p = 0.02) and body weight (1.5 kg ± 1.8 vs. 0.7 kg ± 1.8; p = 0.02). | [19] |
2009 | CasenBiotic a (1 × 108 CFU/day) VLS3 b (9 × 1011/day) | RCT (Cross-over) | 6 months | 40 | Increased Quality of Life score from the PedsQLTM survey. (Probiotics group—parent-reported, 0.87 higher (SD 0.19 higher to 1.55 higher)), (Probiotics group—child-reported, 0.59 higher (SD 0.07 lower to 1.26 higher)). | [18] |
2013 | Protexin capsule c (2 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Parallel) | 1 month | 20 | Rate of pulmonary exacerbation significantly reduced among probiotic group (p < 0.01). Parent-reported quality of life improved in probiotic group compared with placebo group at 3rd month (p = 0.01), not significant at 6th month of probiotic treatment. | [21] |
2013 | Protexin Restor sachet d (1 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Parallel) | 1 month | 24 | Mean faecal calprotectin levels decreased with probiotics 56.2 µg/g, compared to placebo 182.1 µg/g (p = 0.031). | [17] |
2014 | L. reuteri DSM 17938 (1 × 108 CFU/day) | RCT (Cross-over) | 6 months | 30 | Significant improvement in gastrointestinal health (GIQLY score placebo 11.2 ± 0.3, probiotic 11.4 ± 0.3, (p = 0.0036)). Decreased calprotectin (μg/ml) (placebo 33.8 ± 23.5, probiotic 20.3 ± 19.3, (p =0.003)). | [195] |
2014 | L. reuteri ATCC55730 (1010 CFU/day) | RCT (Parallel) | 6 months | 30 | Reduced pulmonary exacerbations (odds ratio 0.06 ([95% confidence interval (CI) 0–0.40); number needed to treat 3 (95% CI 2–7), p < 0.01). Reduced number of upper respiratory tract infections (odds ratio 0.14 ([95% CI 0–0.96); number needed to treat 6 (95% CI 3–102), p < 0.05). | [20] |
2014 | Lactobacillus GG (6 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Parallel) | 1 month | 10 | Reduced calprotectin concentrations from baseline, compared to placebo (164 ± 70 vs. 78 ± 54 µg/g, p < 0.05; 251 ± 174 vs. 176 ± 125 µg/g, p = 0.3). | [16] |
2018 | Lactobacillus GG (6 × 109 CFU/day) | RCT (Parallel) | 12 months | 41 | No significant difference in odds of pulmonary exacerbations (OR 0.83; 95% CI 0.38 to 1.82, p = 0.643). No significant difference in odds of hospitalisations (OR 1.67; 95% CI 0.75 to 3.72, p = 0.211). No significant difference was for body mass index and FEV1. | [193] |
2018 | FOS + multi strain powder e (108–109 CFU/day each strain) | RCT (Parallel) | 90 days | 22 | No significance difference in FEV1 and nutritional status markers. Patients with Staphylococcus aureus + supplementation had reduced NOx (p = 0.030), IL-6 (p = 0.033), and IL-8 (p = 0.009). | [66] |
2018 | L. rhamnosus SP1 (DSM 21690) and B. animalis lactis spp. BLC1 (LMG 23512) (1010 CFU/day) | RCT (Cross-over) | 4 months | 31 | No significant changes in the clinical parameters (BMI, FEV1%, abdominal pain, exacerbations). Normalization of gut permeability was observed in 13% of patients during probiotic treatment. | [196] |
Dietary Component | Study Model | Disease Type | Effect on Disease | Effect on Gut Microbiome | Effect on Host Biomarkers | Ref |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Specific diet | ||||||
Low fat, high fibre | Human | Ulcerative colitis (IBD) | ↑ QoL IBD questionnaire scores | ↑ Bacteroidetes, Faecalibacterium prausnitzii ↓ Actinobacteria | ↑ Acetate, tryptophan ↓ Lauric acid | [228] |
Monosaccharides | ||||||
High-sugar diet | Mouse | DSS-induced colitis (IBD) | ↑ Colitis | ↑ Verruncomicrobiaceae, Porphyromonadaceae ↓ α-Diversity, Prevotellaceae, Lachnospiraceae, Anaeroplasmataceae | ↑ Intestinal permeability, proinflammatory cytokines, BMDM reactivity to LPS. | [229] |
Artificial sweetener | Mouse | SAMP1/YitFc ileitis (Crohn’s disease) | No change | ↑ Proteobacteria | ↑ Ileal myeloperoxidase reactivity | [230] |
Milk oligosaccharides | ||||||
GOS | Human crossover | NA | NA | ↑ Bifidobacterium ↓ Ruminococcus, Synergistes, Dehalobacterium, Holdemania | ↓ Butyrate (NS), Bacteroides predicts OGTT | [231] |
pAOS | Mouse | P. aeruginosa infection | ↑ Bacterial clearance | ↑ Bifidobacterium, Sutturella wadsworthia, Clostridiumcluster XI | ↑ Butyrate, propionate ↑ IFN-γ, t-bet gene, M1 macrophage, IL10 ↓ TNF a, IL-4, gata 3 gene | [232] |
2′-Fucosyl lactose | Mouse | IBD | ↓ Colitis | ↑ Ruminococcus gnavus ↓ Bacteroides acidifaciens, Bacteroides vulgatus | ↑ Acetate, propionate, valerate, TGFβ ↓ iNOS, IL-1β, IL-6 | [221] |
Plant polysaccharides | ||||||
Dietary fibre | Mouse | T-cell-transfer colitis (IBD) | ↓ Colitis | No change in microbial load or Clostridiales abundance, metabolic changes between high-fibre and low-fibre diets presumed based on butyrate output | ↑ Treg cells, caecal and luminal butyrate, Foxp3 histone H3 acetylation | [233] |
Dietary fibre | Human, RCT meta-analysis | NA | NA | ↑ Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillus No change in α-diversity | ↑ Faecal butyrate FOS and GOS drove microbial shifts | [234] |
Dietary fibre | Mouse | Emphysema | ↓ Alveolar destruction and inflammation in BALF | ↑ Bacteroidetes ↓ Lactobacillaceae, Defluviitaleaceae | ↑ SCFA, bile acids, sphingolipids ↓ Macrophages and neutrophils in BALF ↓ mRNA expression of IFN-γ, IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, IL-18, IRF-5, MMP-12, TNF-α, TGF-β, and cathepsin S | [235] |
BLIDF | Mouse | DSS-induced acute colitis (IBD) | Reduced colitis symptoms | ↓ Akkermansia ↑ Parasutterella, Alistipes, Erysipelatoclostridium | ↑ SCFA, secondary bile acids, claudin-1 ↑ Occludin and mucin 2 expression | [222] |
FOS | Human, crossover | NA | NA | ↑ Bifidobacterium ↓ Phascolarctobacterium, Enterobacter, Turicibacter, Coprococcus, Salmonella | ↓ Butyrate, Bacteroides predicts OGTT | [231] |
FOS, XOS, polydextrose, resistant dextrin | Human, RCT | CRC | ↓ Inflammation | (Preoperative) ↓ Bacteroides ↑ Bifodobacterium, Enterococcus (Postoperative) ↓ Bacteroides ↑ Enterococcus, Lactococcus, Streptococcus | (Preoperative) ↑ IgG, IgM, transferrin (Postoperative) ↑ IgG, IgA, suppressor/cytotoxic T cells CD3+CD8+, total B lymphocytes | [227] |
ITF | Human, RCT | Ulcerative colitis | ↑ Remission ↓ Colitis | ↑ Bifidobacteriaceae, Lachnospiraceae (not correlated with colitis reduction) | ↑ Total SCFA, butyrate ↓ Faecal calprotectin | [226] |
Psyllium | Mouse | DSS-induced, T-cell-transfer colitis (IBD) | ↓ Colitis | ↑ α-Diversity ↓ Microbial density | ↑ Butyrate, Treg cells ↓ IL-6, faecal LCN-2, intestinal permeability | [223] |
Wheat bran | Pig | NA | ↓ Inflammation pathways | ↑ Bifidobacterium, Lactobacillis ↓ Escherichia coli | ↓ TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6 and TLRs/MyD88/NF-κB pathways | [224] |
SCFA | ||||||
Butyrate | Mouse | IBD | ↓ Colitis | ↑ α-Diversity (NS), Lactobacillaceae, Erysipelotrichaceae ↓ IgA-coated bacteria, Prevotellaceae | ↓ TNF, IL-6, infiltration of inflammatory cells in colonic mucosa, acetate | [225] |
Dietary fats | ||||||
Saturated fats | Mouse | Il10−/−, DSS-induced colitis (IBD) | ↑ Colitis | ↑ Bacteroidetes, Bilophila wadsworthia ↓ α-Diversity, Firmicutes | ↑ TH1 mucosal response due to change in bile acid production | [236] |
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van Dorst, J.M.; Tam, R.Y.; Ooi, C.Y. What Do We Know about the Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis? Is There a Role for Probiotics and Prebiotics? Nutrients 2022, 14, 480. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14030480
van Dorst JM, Tam RY, Ooi CY. What Do We Know about the Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis? Is There a Role for Probiotics and Prebiotics? Nutrients. 2022; 14(3):480. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14030480
Chicago/Turabian Stylevan Dorst, Josie M., Rachel Y. Tam, and Chee Y. Ooi. 2022. "What Do We Know about the Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis? Is There a Role for Probiotics and Prebiotics?" Nutrients 14, no. 3: 480. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14030480
APA Stylevan Dorst, J. M., Tam, R. Y., & Ooi, C. Y. (2022). What Do We Know about the Microbiome in Cystic Fibrosis? Is There a Role for Probiotics and Prebiotics? Nutrients, 14(3), 480. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14030480