Combining mucosal microbiome and host multi-omics data shows prognostic potential in paediatric ulcerative colitis.
Study Design
- نوع الدراسة
- Cohort Study
- حجم العينة
- 56
- المجتمع المدروس
- Treatment-naive children with ulcerative colitis
- التدخل
- Combining mucosal microbiome and host multi-omics data shows prognostic potential in paediatric ulcerative colitis. None
- المقارن
- None
- النتيجة الأولية
- Prediction of 6-month relapse in pediatric UC
- اتجاه التأثير
- Mixed
- خطر التحيز
- Unclear
Abstract
Current first-line treatments of paediatric ulcerative colitis (UC) maintain a 6-month remission in only half of the patients. Relapse prediction at diagnosis could enable earlier introduction of immunosuppressants. We collected intestinal biopsies from 56 treatment-naïve children, combining mucosal quantitative microbial profiling with host epigenomics, transcriptomics, genotyping, and in vitro and in vivo experiments on selected bacteria. Baseline bacterial diversity is lower in relapsing children, who have fewer butyrate producers but more oral-associated bacteria, whereof Veillonella parvula induces inflammation in epithelial cell lines and IL10-/- mice. Microbiota has the strongest association with future relapse, followed by host epigenome and transcriptome. Interferon gamma signalling is also linked to relapse-associated bacteria. Relapse-prediction using separate omics data is outperformed by a robust machine learning approach combining microbiomes and epigenomes. In summary, host-microbe data have prognostic potential in paediatric UC. Our translational findings also suggest that pro-inflammatory oral-associated colonizers can exploit the reduced colonic bacterial diversity of relapsing children.
باختصار
Applying multi-omics on intestinal biopsies from treatment-naïve children shows that relapse-prediction using separate omics data is outperformed by a robust machine learning approach combining microbiomes and epigenomes, and suggests that pro-inflammatory oral-associated colonizers can exploit the reduced colonic bacterial diversity of relapsing children.
Used In Evidence Reviews
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