A Randomized Controlled Trial of Probiotics Targeting Gut Dysbiosis in Huntington's Disease.

IF 2.1 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Cory I Wasser, Emily-Clare Mercieca, Geraldine Kong, Anthony J Hannan, Brianna Allford, Sonja J McKeown, Julie C Stout, Yifat Glikmann-Johnston
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Background: Gastrointestinal symptoms are clinical features of Huntington's disease (HD), which adversely affect people's quality of life. We recently reported the first evidence of gut dysbiosis in HD gene expansion carriers (HDGECs). Here, we report on a randomized controlled clinical trial of a 6-week probiotic intervention in HDGECs.

Objective: The primary objective was to determine whether probiotics improved gut microbiome composition in terms of richness, evenness, structure, and diversity of functional pathways and enzymes. Exploratory objectives were to determine whether probiotic supplementation improved cognition, mood, and gastrointestinal symptoms.

Methods: Forty-one HDGECs, including 19 early manifest and 22 premanifest HDGECs were compared with 36 matched-healthy controls (HCs). Participants were randomly assigned probiotics or placebo and provided fecal samples at baseline and 6-week follow-up, which were sequenced using 16S-V3-V4 rRNA to characterize the gut microbiome. Participants completed a battery of cognitive tests and self-report questionnaires measuring mood and gastrointestinal symptoms.

Results: HDGECs had altered gut microbiome diversity when compared to HCs, indicating gut dysbiosis. Probiotic intervention did not ameliorate gut dysbiosis or have any effect on cognition, mood, or gastrointestinal symptoms. Gut microbiome differences between HDGECs and HCs were unchanged across time points, suggesting consistency of gut microbiome differences within groups.

Conclusion: Despite the lack of probiotic effects in this trial, the potential utility of the gut as a therapeutic target in HD should continue to be explored given the clinical symptomology, gut dysbiosis, and positive results from probiotics and other gut interventions in similar neurodegenerative diseases.

一项针对亨廷顿氏病肠道生态失调的益生菌随机对照试验。
背景:胃肠道症状是亨廷顿病(HD)的临床特征,严重影响患者的生活质量。我们最近报道了HD基因扩增载体(HDGECs)肠道生态失调的第一个证据。在这里,我们报告了一项为期6周的益生菌干预hdgec的随机对照临床试验。目的:主要目的是确定益生菌是否在丰富度、均匀度、结构和功能途径和酶的多样性方面改善肠道微生物组组成。探索性目的是确定补充益生菌是否能改善认知、情绪和胃肠道症状。方法:41例hdgec,其中早期表现19例,前表现22例,与36例匹配健康对照(hc)进行比较。参与者被随机分配益生菌或安慰剂,并在基线和6周随访时提供粪便样本,使用16S-V3-V4 rRNA对其进行测序以表征肠道微生物群。参与者完成了一系列认知测试和自我报告问卷,测量情绪和胃肠道症状。结果:与hc相比,HDGECs改变了肠道微生物群多样性,表明肠道生态失调。益生菌干预没有改善肠道生态失调或对认知、情绪或胃肠道症状有任何影响。hdgec和hc之间的肠道微生物组差异在不同的时间点上没有变化,这表明组内肠道微生物组差异的一致性。结论:尽管在本试验中缺乏益生菌的作用,但鉴于临床症状、肠道生态失调以及益生菌和其他肠道干预在类似神经退行性疾病中的积极结果,肠道作为HD治疗靶点的潜在效用应该继续探索。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.70%
发文量
60
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