Lower gut dysbiosis and mortality in acute critical illness: a systematic review and meta-analysis

被引:14
作者
Evans, Tess [1 ,3 ]
Ali, Umar [3 ]
Anderton, Ryan [4 ]
Raby, Edward [2 ,3 ]
Manning, Laurens [2 ,3 ]
Litton, Edward [1 ,3 ]
机构
[1] WA Hlth, Fiona Stanley Hosp, South Metropolitan Hlth Serv, Intens Care Unit, Perth, Australia
[2] WA Hlth, Fiona Stanley Hosp, Dept Infect Dis, South Metropolitan Hlth Serv, Perth, Australia
[3] Univ Western Australia, Sch Med, Nedlands, Australia
[4] Univ Notre Dame Australia Fremantle, Sch Hlth Sci, Fremantle, Australia
关键词
Gut; Microbiome; Dysbiosis; Critical illness; Sepsis; HUMAN MICROBIOME RESEARCH; INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA; ILL PATIENTS; DIVERSITY; RISK;
D O I
10.1186/s40635-022-00486-z
中图分类号
R4 [临床医学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100602 ;
摘要
BackgroundThe human gastrointestinal tract harbours a complex multi-kingdom community known as the microbiome. Dysbiosis refers to its disruption and is reportedly extreme in acute critical illness yet its clinical implications are unresolved. The review systematically evaluates the association between gut dysbiosis and clinical outcomes of patients early in critical illness.MethodsFollowing PRISMA guidelines, a prospectively registered search was undertaken of MEDLINE and Cochrane databases for observational studies undertaking metagenomic sequencing of the lower gastrointestinal tract of critically ill adults and children within 72 h of admission. Eligible studies reported an alpha diversity metric and one or more of the primary outcome, in-hospital mortality, or secondary clinical outcomes. After aggregate data were requested, meta-analysis was performed for four studies with in-hospital mortality stratified to high or low Shannon index.ResultsThe search identified 26 studies for systematic review and 4 had suitable data for meta-analysis. No effect of alpha diversity was seen on in-hospital mortality after binary transformation of Shannon index (odds ratio 0.52, CI 0.12-4.98, I-2 = 0.64) however certainty of evidence is low. Pathogen dominance and commensal depletion were each more frequently associated with in-hospital mortality, adverse clinical and ecological sequelae, particularly overabundance of Enterococcus.ConclusionsThere is a paucity of large, rigorous observational studies in this population. Globally, alpha diversity was dynamically reduced in early ICU admission in adults and children and was not associated with in-hospital mortality. The abundance of taxa such as Enterococcus spp. appears to offer greater predictive capacity for important clinical and ecological outcomes.
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页数:17
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