Extreme Dysbiosis of the Microbiome in Critical Illness

Author:

McDonald Daniel1,Ackermann Gail1,Khailova Ludmila2,Baird Christine2,Heyland Daren3,Kozar Rosemary4,Lemieux Margot3,Derenski Karrie5,King Judy6,Vis-Kampen Christine6,Knight Rob1,Wischmeyer Paul E.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California, USA

2. Department of Anesthesiology and Pediatrics (Nutrition Section), University of Colorado Denver, Aurora, Colorado, USA

3. Department of Critical Care Medicine, Queen’s University and Clinical Evaluation Research Unit, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, Ontario, Canada

4. Shock Trauma Center, University of Maryland, University of Maryland Medical Center, Baltimore, Maryland, USA

5. Department of Pharmacy, Cox Health, Springfield, Missouri, USA

6. Critical Care Department, Southlake Regional Health Centre, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Critical illness may be associated with the loss of normal, “health promoting” bacteria, allowing overgrowth of disease-promoting pathogenic bacteria (dysbiosis), which, in turn, makes patients susceptible to hospital-acquired infections, sepsis, and organ failure. This has significant world health implications, because sepsis is becoming a leading cause of death worldwide, and hospital-acquired infections contribute to significant illness and increased costs. Thus, a trial that monitors the ICU patient microbiome to confirm and characterize this hypothesis is urgently needed. Our study analyzed the microbiomes of 115 critically ill subjects and demonstrated rapid dysbiosis from unexpected environmental sources after ICU admission. These data may provide the first steps toward defining targeted therapies that correct potentially “illness-promoting” dysbiosis with probiotics or with targeted, multimicrobe synthetic “stool pills” that restore a healthy microbiome in the ICU setting to improve patient outcomes.

Funder

NSF

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Molecular Biology,Microbiology

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