Analysis of gut microbiota alteration and application as an auxiliary prognostic marker for sepsis in children: a pilot study

2021 
Background Emerging evidence suggests that gut microbiota dysbiosis plays a role in sepsis. Recent advances in sequencing technology enable the characterization of the gut microbiota and can provide clues for the pathogenesis of sepsis, which may help develop biomarkers for diagnosis or prognosis prediction in children with sepsis. Methods The gut microbiota from 25 children with sepsis and 15 age- and sex-matched healthy controls were extracted and sequenced by high-throughput Illumina Hiseq, targeting the 16S rDNA genes. The differences of gut microbiota between the two groups were analyzed to assess if the gut microbiota can be used as an auxiliary prognostic marker for sepsis. Results The diversity of gut microbiota in children with sepsis was significantly lower than that of healthy controls (P<0.001). The overall community structure of gut microbiota was also altered considerably. On the genus level, children with sepsis had more opportunistic pathogens, such as Acinetobacter and Enterococcus, while fewer beneficial bacterial, such as Roseburia, Bacteroides, Clostridia, Faecalibacterium, and Blautia, were detected. Further analysis of the association between the gut microbiota and clinical features revealed that the pathogens from bacteria culture correlated to the dominant bacteria genus detected in the intestinal flora. Furthermore, the gut microbiota diversity was negatively associated with the antibiotic therapy duration, but did not correlate with type of antibiotics used. Finally, gut microbiota disturbance was correlated with increased mortality rate. Conclusions Overall, we confirmed that gut microbiota disturbance occurred in the children with sepsis, and changes in the fecal microbiota were closely related to clinical characteristics. Elucidation of such dysbiosis could improve our understanding of sepsis pathogenesis and help develop microbiota-based diagnosis, monitoring, and therapy for sepsis.
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