4.4 Review

Microbial-Based and Microbial-Targeted Therapies for Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Journal

DIGESTIVE DISEASES AND SCIENCES
Volume 65, Issue 3, Pages 757-788

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10620-020-06090-z

Keywords

Pouchitis; Fecal microbiota transplantation; Probiotics; Prebiotics; Synbiotics; Diet; Live biotherapeutic products; Dysbiosis; Microbiota

Funding

  1. NIDDK NIH HHS [P01 DK094779, P30 DK034987] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIH HHS [P40 OD010995] Funding Source: Medline

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Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), including Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, and pouchitis, are chronic, relapsing intestinal inflammatory disorders mediated by dysregulated immune responses to resident microbiota. Current standard therapies that block immune activation with oral immunosuppressives or biologic agents are generally effective, but each therapy induces a sustained remission in only a minority of patients. Furthermore, these approaches can have severe adverse events. Recent compelling evidence of a role of unbalanced microbiota (dysbiosis) driving immune dysfunction and inflammation in IBD supports the therapeutic rationale for manipulating the dysbiotic microbiota. Traditional approaches using currently available antibiotics, probiotics, prebiotics, and synbiotics have not produced optimal results, but promising outcomes with fecal microbiota transplant provide a proof of principle for targeting the resident microbiota. Rationally designed oral biotherapeutic products (LBPs) composed of mixtures of protective commensal bacterial strains demonstrate impressive preclinical results. Resident microbial-based and microbial-targeted therapies are currently being studied with increasing intensity for IBD primary therapy with favorable early results. This review presents current evidence and therapeutic mechanisms of microbiota modulation, emphasizing clinical studies, and outlines prospects for future IBD treatment using new approaches, such as LBPs, bacteriophages, bacterial function-editing substrates, and engineered bacteria. We believe that the optimal clinical use of microbial manipulation may be as adjuvants to immunosuppressive for accelerated and improved induction of deep remission and as potential safer solo approaches to sustained remission using personalized regimens based on an individual patient's microbial profile.

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