A pilot study demonstrating the impact of surgical bowel preparation on intestinal microbiota composition following colon and rectal surgery

Author:

Nalluri-Butz Harika,Bobel Matthew C.,Nugent Julia,Boatman Sonja,Emanuelson Ryan,Melton-Meaux Genevieve,Madoff Robert D.,Jahansouz Cyrus,Staley Christopher,Gaertner Wolfgang B.

Abstract

AbstractThe intestinal microbiota has been implicated in the pathogenesis of complications following colorectal surgery, yet perioperative changes in gut microbiome composition are poorly understood. The objective of this study was to characterize the perioperative gut microbiome in patients undergoing colonoscopy and colorectal surgery and determine factors influencing its composition. Using Illumina amplicon sequencing coupled with targeted metabolomics, we characterized the fecal microbiota in: (A) patients (n = 15) undergoing colonoscopy who received mechanical bowel preparation, and (B) patients (n = 15) undergoing colorectal surgery who received surgical bowel preparation, composed of mechanical bowel preparation with oral antibiotics, and perioperative intravenous antibiotics. Microbiome composition was characterized before and up to six months following each intervention. Colonoscopy patients had minor shifts in bacterial community composition that recovered to baseline at a mean of 3 (1–13) days. Surgery patients demonstrated substantial shifts in bacterial composition with greater abundances of Enterococcus, Lactobacillus, and Streptococcus. Compositional changes persisted in the early postoperative period with recovery to baseline beginning at a mean of 31 (16–43) days. Our results support surgical bowel preparation as a factor significantly influencing gut microbial composition following colorectal surgery, while mechanical bowel preparation has little impact.

Funder

Hubbard Family private fund for advancing treatment practices to improve patient outcomes in colorectal surgery

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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