4.7 Article

Respiratory Microbiome Disruption and Risk for Ventilator-Associated Lower Respiratory Tract Infection

Journal

CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES
Volume 74, Issue 9, Pages 1564-1571

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cid/ciab678

Keywords

long-term acute care; mechanical ventilation; microbiome; ventilator-associated pneumonia

Funding

  1. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) [BAA 200-2016-91964, 200-2018-02919]
  2. National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases [K23 AI121485, L30 AI120149]
  3. CDC Cooperative Agreement FOA [CK16-004]

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Persistent disruption of the lower respiratory tract microbiome, characterized by consecutive days with low Shannon diversity, identifies a high-risk population for lower respiratory tract infection among patients with prolonged critical illness and dependence on mechanical ventilation.
Persistent lower respiratory tract microbiome disruption, best characterized by consecutive days with low Shannon diversity, identifies a population at high risk for lower respiratory tract infection among patients with prolonged critical illness and dependence on mechanical ventilation. Background Ventilator-associated lower respiratory tract infection (VA-LRTI) is common among critically ill patients and has been associated with increased morbidity and mortality. In acute critical illness, respiratory microbiome disruption indices (MDIs) have been shown to predict risk for VA-LRTI, but their utility beyond the first days of critical illness is unknown. We sought to characterize how MDIs previously shown to predict VA-LRTI at initiation of mechanical ventilation change with prolonged mechanical ventilation, and if they remain associated with VA-LRTI risk. Methods We developed a cohort of 83 subjects admitted to a long-term acute care hospital due to their prolonged dependence on mechanical ventilation; performed dense, longitudinal sampling of the lower respiratory tract, collecting 1066 specimens; and characterized the lower respiratory microbiome by 16S rRNA sequencing as well as total bacterial abundance by 16S rRNA quantitative polymerase chain reaction. Results Cross-sectional MDIs, including low Shannon diversity and high total bacterial abundance, were associated with risk for VA-LRTI, but associations had wide posterior credible intervals. Persistent lower respiratory microbiome disruption showed a more robust association with VA-LRTI risk, with each day of (base e) Shannon diversity <2.0 associated with a VA-LRTI odds ratio of 1.36 (95% credible interval, 1.10-1.72). The observed association was consistent across multiple clinical definitions of VA-LRTI. Conclusions Cross-sectional MDIs have limited ability to discriminate VA-LRTI risk during prolonged mechanical ventilation, but persistent lower respiratory tract microbiome disruption, best characterized by consecutive days with low Shannon diversity, may identify a population at high risk for infection and may help target infection-prevention interventions.

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