Changes in fecal microbiota with CFTR modulator therapy: A pilot study
•People with CF often have exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (PI) and altered fecal microbiomes.•Whether the PI and resulting nutrient malabsorption causes the fecal dysbiosis is unknown.•In a pilot study, the effects of CFTR modulators on nutrient absorption and dysbiosis depended on whether the re...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cystic fibrosis 2021-09, Vol.20 (5), p.742-746 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •People with CF often have exocrine pancreatic insufficiency (PI) and altered fecal microbiomes.•Whether the PI and resulting nutrient malabsorption causes the fecal dysbiosis is unknown.•In a pilot study, the effects of CFTR modulators on nutrient absorption and dysbiosis depended on whether the recipient was PI or not.•People with PI had trends towards improvement in both.•These findings must be validated in larger studies.
Studies have demonstrated that people with CF with pancreatic insufficiency (PI) have fecal dysbioses. Evidence suggests the causes of these dysbioses are multifactorial, and that important drivers include antibiotic exposure, dietary intake, and CF gastrointestinal tract dysfunction, including nutrient malabsorption. In this pilot study, we tested whether initiation of the CFTR modulator treatments ivacaftor (in a cohort of pancreatic sufficient (PS) people with CF and an R117H CFTR variant) or lumacaftor/ivacaftor (in a cohort of PI people with CF and an F508del variant) changed fecal measures of malabsorption or fecal microbiomes. While we identified no statistically significant fecal changes with either treatment, we detected trends in the PI cohort when initiating lumacaftor/ivacaftor towards decreased fecal fat content and towards fecal microbiomes that more closely resembled the fecal microbiota of people without PI. While these findings support a model in which nutrient malabsorption resulting from CF-induced PI drives fecal dysbiosis, they must be validated in future, larger studies of fecal microbiome and malabsorption outcomes with highly effective CFTR modulator therapies. |
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ISSN: | 1569-1993 1873-5010 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jcf.2020.12.002 |