Reduced Gut Microbiome Diversity in People With HIV Who Have Distal Neuropathic Pain
•Microbiome diversity was similar in people with HIV (PWH) and without HIV (PWoH).•Worse neuropathic pain accompanied lower microbiome diversity in PWH but not PWoH.•Blautia and Clostridium species were relatively more abundant in PWH with DNP.•Gut dysbiosis may contribute to prevalent neuropathic p...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The journal of pain 2022-02, Vol.23 (2), p.318-325 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Microbiome diversity was similar in people with HIV (PWH) and without HIV (PWoH).•Worse neuropathic pain accompanied lower microbiome diversity in PWH but not PWoH.•Blautia and Clostridium species were relatively more abundant in PWH with DNP.•Gut dysbiosis may contribute to prevalent neuropathic pain in PWH.•Re-establishing a healthy microbiota might reduce neuropathic pain.
Gut dysbiosis, defined as pathogenic alterations in the distribution and abundance of different microbial species, is associated with neuropathic pain in a variety of clinical conditions, but this has not been explored in the context of neuropathy in people with HIV (PWH). We assessed gut microbial diversity and dysbiosis in PWH and people without HIV (PWoH), some of whom reported distal neuropathic pain (DNP). DNP was graded on a standardized, validated severity scale. The gut microbiome was characterized using 16S rRNA sequencing and diversity was assessed using phylogenetic tree construction. Songbird analysis (https://github.com/mortonjt/songbird) was used to produce a multinomial regression model predicting counts of specific microbial taxa through metadata covariate columns. Participants were 226 PWH and 101 PWoH, mean (SD) age 52.0 (13.5), 21.1% female, 54.7% men who have sex with men, 44.7% non-white. Among PWH, median (interquartile range, IQR) nadir and current CD4 were 174 (21, 302) and 618 (448, 822), respectively; 90% were virally suppressed on antiretroviral therapy. PWH and PWoH did not differ with respect to microbiome diversity as indexed by Faith's phylogenetic diversity (PD). More severe DNP was associated with lower alpha diversity as indexed by Faith's phylogenetic diversity in PWH (Spearman's ρ = .224, P = 0.0007), but not in PWoH (Spearman's ρ = .032, P = .748). These relationships were not confounded by demographics or disease factors. In addition, the log-ratio of features identified at the genus level as Blautia to Lachnospira was statistically significantly higher in PWH with DNP than in PWH without DNP (t-test, P = 1.01e-3). Furthermore, the log-ratio of Clostridium features to Lachnospira features also was higher in PWH with DNP than in those without (t-test, P = 6.24e-5). Our results, in combination with previous findings in other neuropathic pain conditions, suggest that gut dysbiosis, particularly reductions in diversity and relative increases in the ratios of Blautia and Clostridium to Lachnospira, may contribute to prevalent DNP in PWH. Two candidate |
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ISSN: | 1526-5900 1528-8447 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jpain.2021.08.006 |