4.6 Article

Anti-Acid Drug Treatment Induces Changes in the Gut Microbiome Composition of Hemodialysis Patients

Journal

MICROORGANISMS
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms9020286

Keywords

microbiome; proton pump inhibitor; histamine-2 blocker; hemodialysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan [MOST 106-2314-B-037-054, MOST 107-2314-B-037-104, MOST 107-2314-B-037-098-MY3]
  2. Kaohsiung Medical University Hospital, Taiwan [KMUH106-6R17, KMUH106-6T03, KMUH107-7R16, KMUH107-7R78, KMUH108-8M11, KMUH108-8R70, KMUH109-9R16, KMUH109-9R81]
  3. Kaohsiung Medical University, Taiwan [KMU-Q108024, KMU-Q108027]
  4. NSYSU-KMU JOINT RESEARCH PROJECT [NSYSUKMU 105-I005, NSYSUKMU 106-I005]

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This study investigated the differences in gut microbiota composition among hemodialysis patients receiving different anti-acid drugs, revealing that PPI significantly altered the gut microbiota compared to H-2 blocker users or controls. Importantly, there was a significant enrichment of the genus Streptococcus in PPI users.
Anti-acid drugs, proton pump inhibitor (PPI) and histamine-2 blocker (H-2-blocker), are commonly prescribed to treat gastrointestinal disorders. These anti-acid drugs alter gut microbiota in the general population, but their effects are not known in hemodialysis patients. Hence, we investigated the microbiota composition in hemodialysis patients treated with PPIs or H-2-blocker. Among 193 hemodialysis patients, we identified 32 H-2-blocker users, 23 PPI users, and 138 no anti-acid drug subjects. Fecal samples were obtained to analyze the gut microbiome using 16S RNA amplicon sequencing. Differences in the microbial composition of the H-2-blocker users, PPI users, and controls were assessed using linear discriminant analysis effect size and the random forest algorithm. The species richness or evenness (alpha-diversity) was similar among the three groups, whereas the inter-individual diversity (beta-diversity) was different between H-2-blocker users, PPI users, and controls. Hemodialysis patients treated with H-2-blocker and PPIs had a higher microbial dysbiosis index than the controls, with a significant increase in the genera Provetella 2, Phascolarctobacterium, Christensenellaceae R-7 group, and Eubacterium oxidoreducens group in H-2-blocker users, and Streptococcus and Veillonella in PPI users. In addition, compared to the H-2-blocker users, there was a significant enrichment of the genera Streptococcus in PPI users, as confirmed by the random forest analysis and the confounder-adjusted regression model. In conclusion, PPIs significantly changed the gut microbiota composition in hemodialysis patients compared to H-2-blocker users or controls. Importantly, the Streptococcus genus was significantly increased in PPI treatment. These findings caution against the overuse of PPIs.

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