A metagenomic prospective cohort study on gut microbiome composition and clinical infection in Small Bowel Transplantation

What is already known on this topic</p><p>Two-thirds of Small Bowel Transplantation recipients develop bacteremia post-transplantation. One-third die of sepsis, commonly with bacteria of gut origin, thought to translocate through the implanted organ. To improve patient outcomes, clinicians must predict and treat infection in a more timely manner.</p><p>What this study adds</p><p>Our metagenomic study showed that 4/5 patients had clinically significant infections thought to be of intestinal origin. In all cases, enteric pathogens had demonstrably colonized the gut between 1-10 days prior to invasive clinical infection.</p><p>How this study might affect research, practice, or policy</p><p>Fecal sampling in SBT patients could be a useful surveillance tool for impeding sepsis with specific gut bacteria. It would allow clinicians to predict organisms likely to cause infection and facilitate personalized antimicrobial prescribing.

Identifier
Source https://data.blue-cloud.org/search-details?step=~012B2B323518F977FA2553F53502CB9500B9326CEF6
Metadata Access https://data.blue-cloud.org/api/collections/B2B323518F977FA2553F53502CB9500B9326CEF6
Provenance
Instrument Illumina NovaSeq 6000; ILLUMINA
Publisher Blue-Cloud Data Discovery & Access service; ELIXIR-ENA
Contributor University of Cambridge
Publication Year 2024
OpenAccess true
Contact blue-cloud-support(at)maris.nl
Representation
Discipline Marine Science
Spatial Coverage (0.131W, 52.175S, 0.142E, 52.195N)
Temporal Coverage Begin 2021-01-01T00:00:00Z
Temporal Coverage End 2021-11-09T00:00:00Z