Author:
Park Gwoncheol,Munley Jennifer A.,Kelly Lauren S.,Kannan Kolenkode B.,Mankowski Robert T.,Sharma Ashish,Upchurch Gilbert,Casadesus Gemma,Chakrabarty Paramita,Wallet Shannon M.,Maile Robert,Bible Letitia E.,Wang Bo,Moldawer Lyle L.,Mohr Alicia M.,Efron Philip A.,Nagpal Ravinder
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Sepsis and trauma are known to disrupt gut bacterial microbiome communities, but the impacts and perturbations in the fungal (mycobiome) community after severe infection or injury, particularly in patients experiencing chronic critical illness (CCI), remain unstudied.
Methods
We assess persistence of the gut mycobiome perturbation (dysbiosis) in patients experiencing CCI following sepsis or trauma for up to two-to-three weeks after intensive care unit hospitalization.
Results
We show that the dysbiotic mycobiome arrays shift toward a pathobiome state, which is more susceptible to infection, in CCI patients compared to age-matched healthy subjects. The fungal community in CCI patients is largely dominated by Candida spp; while, the commensal fungal species are depleted. Additionally, these myco-pathobiome arrays correlate with alterations in micro-ecological niche involving specific gut bacteria and gut-blood metabolites.
Conclusions
The findings reveal the persistence of mycobiome dysbiosis in both sepsis and trauma settings, even up to two weeks post-sepsis and trauma, highlighting the need to assess and address the increased risk of fungal infections in CCI patients.
Graphical Abstract
Funder
National Institutes of Health
National Science Foundation
Florida State University College of Health & Human Sciences
FSU Council for Research & Creativity
Infectious Diseases Society of America
U.S. Department of Agriculture
Florida Department of Health
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
8 articles.
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