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Fecal microbiota diversity disruption and clinical outcomes after auto-HCT: a multicenter observational study
Author(s) -
Niloufer Khan,
Sarah Lindner,
Antonio L. C. Gomes,
Sean M. Devlin,
Gunjan L. Shah,
Anthony D. Sung,
Craig S. Sauter,
Heather Landau,
Parastoo B. Dahi,
Miguel-Ángel Perales,
David J. Chung,
Alexander M. Lesokhin,
Anqi Dai,
Annelie Clurman,
John Slingerland,
Ann E. Slingerland,
Daniel G. Brereton,
Paul A. Giardina,
Molly Maloy,
Gabriel K. Armijo,
Carlos Rondon-Clavo,
Emily Fontana,
Lauren Bohan,
Sendhilnathan Ramalingam,
Amy Bush,
M. Lew,
Julia A. Messina,
Eric R. Littmann,
Ying Taur,
Robert R. Jenq,
Nelson J. Chao,
Sergio Giralt,
Kate A. Markey,
Eric G. Pamer,
Marcel R.M. van den Brink,
Jonathan U. Peled
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
blood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.515
H-Index - 465
eISSN - 1528-0020
pISSN - 0006-4971
DOI - 10.1182/blood.2020006923
Subject(s) - medicine , hazard ratio , feces , transplantation , gastroenterology , hematopoietic stem cell transplantation , multiple myeloma , immunology , biology , confidence interval , microbiology and biotechnology
We previously described clinically relevant reductions in fecal microbiota diversity in patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT). Recipients of high-dose chemotherapy and autologous HCT (auto-HCT) incur similar antibiotic exposures and nutritional alterations. To characterize the fecal microbiota in the auto-HCT population, we analyzed 1161 fecal samples collected from 534 adult recipients of auto-HCT for lymphoma, myeloma, and amyloidosis in an observational study conducted at 2 transplantation centers in the United States. By using 16S ribosomal gene sequencing, we assessed fecal microbiota composition and diversity, as measured by the inverse Simpson index. At both centers, the diversity of early pretransplant fecal microbiota was lower in patients than in healthy controls and decreased further during the course of transplantation. Loss of diversity and domination by specific bacterial taxa occurred during auto-HCT in patterns similar to those with allo-HCT. Above-median fecal intestinal diversity in the periengraftment period was associated with decreased risk of death or progression (progression-free survival hazard ratio, 0.46; 95% confidence interval, 0.26-0.82; P = .008), adjusting for disease and disease status. This suggests that further investigation into the health of the intestinal microbiota in auto-HCT patients and posttransplant outcomes should be undertaken.

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