The gut microbiota, bile acids and their correlation in primary sclerosing cholangitis associated with inflammatory bowel disease

Author:

Torres J12,Palmela C1,Brito H3,Bao X4,Ruiqi H5,Moura-Santos P6,Pereira da Silva J7,Oliveira A8,Vieira C9,Perez K10,Itzkowitz SH2,Colombel JF2,Humbert L10,Rainteau D10,Cravo M1,Rodrigues CM3,Hu J4

Affiliation:

1. Surgical Department, Hospital Beatriz Ângelo, Loures, Portugal

2. Division of Gastroenterology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, USA

3. Research Institute for Medicines (iMed.ULisboa), Universidade de Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal

4. Department of Genetics and Genomic Sciences, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, USA

5. Department of Health Evidence and Policy, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, USA

6. Gastroenterology and Hepatology Division, Hospital de Santa Maria, Lisboa, Portugal

7. Department of Gastroenterology, Instituto Português de Oncologia de Lisboa, Portugal

8. Department of Gastroenterology, Hospital Professor Doutor Fernando Fonseca, Amadora, Portugal

9. Department of Gastroenterology, Centro Hospitalar Barreiro Montijo, Portugal

10. INSERM ERL1157, Sorbonne Université – UPMC Univ Paris 06, Paris, France

Abstract

Background Patients with primary sclerosing cholangitis associated with inflammatory bowel disease (PSC-IBD) have a very high risk of developing colorectal neoplasia. Alterations in the gut microbiota and/or gut bile acids could account for the increase in this risk. However, no studies have yet investigated the net result of cholestasis and a potentially altered bile acid pool interacting with a dysbiotic gut flora in the inflamed colon of PSC-IBD. Aim The aim of this study was to compare the gut microbiota and stool bile acid profiles, as well as and their correlation in patients with PSC-IBD and inflammatory bowel disease alone. Methods Thirty patients with extensive colitis (15 with concomitant primary sclerosing cholangitis) were prospectively recruited and fresh stool samples were collected. The microbiota composition in stool was profiled using bacterial 16S rRNA sequencing. Stool bile acids were assessed by high-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry. Results The total stool bile acid pool was significantly reduced in PSC-IBD. Although no major differences were observed in the individual bile acid species in stool, their overall combination allowed a good separation between PSC-IBD and inflammatory bowel disease. Compared with inflammatory bowel disease alone, PSC-IBD patients demonstrated a different gut microbiota composition with enrichment in Ruminococcus and Fusobacterium genus compared with inflammatory bowel disease. At the operational taxonomic unit level major shifts were observed within the Firmicutes (73%) and Bacteroidetes phyla (17%). Specific microbiota-bile acid correlations were observed in PSC-IBD, where 12% of the operational taxonomic units strongly correlated with stool bile acids, compared with only 0.4% in non-PSC-IBD. Conclusions Patients with PSC-IBD had distinct microbiota and microbiota-stool bile acid correlations as compared with inflammatory bowel disease. Whether these changes are associated with, or may predispose to, an increased risk of colorectal neoplasia needs to be further clarified.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Gastroenterology,Oncology

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