4.7 Review

Antituberculosis Therapy and Gut Microbiota: Review of Potential Host Microbiota Directed-Therapies

Journal

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2021.673100

Keywords

tuberculosis; gut microbiota; TB treatment; host directed-therapies; dysbiosis

Funding

  1. HBNU Consortium, Fogarty International Center
  2. National Institutes of Health [D43TW010543]
  3. Northwestern Medicine Institute for Global Health Catalyzer

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Tuberculosis remains a major global public health issue with significant obstacles such as overlap with HIV infections, long treatment duration, and drug resistance. Recent studies have shown that anti-TB drugs can cause prolonged damage to the gut microbiota, potentially impairing the immune response, and leading to re-infections and drug resistance. Proposed strategies include corrective measures to address dysbiosis for faster bacterial clearance and better treatment outcomes, along with the concept of Host Microbiota Directed-Therapies (HMDT) to improve treatment effectiveness and potentially shorten treatment duration.
Tuberculosis (TB) remains a major public health concern with millions of deaths every year. The overlap with HIV infections, long treatment duration, and the emergence of drug resistance are significant obstacles to the control of the disease. Indeed, the standard first-line regimen TB treatment takes at least six months and even longer for the second-line therapy, resulting in relapses, drug resistance and re-infections. Many recent reports have also shown prolonged and significant damage of the gut microbial community (dysbiosis) from anti-TB drugs that can detrimentally persist several months after the cessation of treatment and could lead to the impairment of the immune response, and thus re-infections and drug resistance. A proposed strategy for shortening the treatment duration is thus to apply corrective measures to the dysbiosis for a faster bacterial clearance and a better treatment outcome. In this review, we will study the role of the gut microbiota in both TB infection and treatment, and its potential link with treatment duration. We will also discuss, the new concept of Host Microbiota Directed-Therapies (HMDT) as a potential adjunctive strategy to improve the treatment effectiveness, reduce its duration and or prevent relapses. These strategies include the use of probiotics, prebiotics, gut microbiota transfer, and other strategies. Application of this innovative solution could lead to HMDT as an adjunctive tool to shorten TB treatment, which will have enormous public health impacts for the End TB Strategy worldwide.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available