Gut microbiota predicts severity and reveals novel metabolic signatures in acute pancreatitis

Author:

Ammer-Herrmenau Christoph,Antweiler Kai L,Asendorf Thomas,Beyer GeorgORCID,Buchholz Soeren M,Cameron Silke,Capurso Gabriele,Damm Marko,Dang Linh,Frost FabianORCID,Gomes Antonio,Hamm Jacob,Henker Robert,Hoffmeister Albrecht,Meinhardt Christian,Nawacki Lukasz,Nunes Vitor,Panyko Arpad,Pardo Cesareo,Phillip Veit,Pukitis Aldis,Rasch Sebastian,Riekstina Diana,Rinja Ecaterina,Ruiz-Rebollo María Lourdes,Sirtl SimonORCID,Weingarten Mark,Sandru VasileORCID,Woitalla Julia,Ellenrieder VolkerORCID,Neesse AlbrechtORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveEarly disease prediction is challenging in acute pancreatitis (AP). Here, we prospectively investigate whether the microbiome predicts severity of AP (Pancreatitis—Microbiome As Predictor of Severity; P-MAPS) early at hospital admission.DesignBuccal and rectal microbial swabs were collected from 424 patients with AP within 72 hours of hospital admission in 15 European centres. All samples were sequenced by full-length 16S rRNA and metagenomic sequencing using Oxford Nanopore Technologies. Primary endpoint was the association of the orointestinal microbiome with the revised Atlanta classification (RAC). Secondary endpoints were mortality, length of hospital stay and severity (organ failure >48 hours and/or occurrence of pancreatic collections requiring intervention) as post hoc analysis. Multivariate analysis was conducted from normalised microbial and corresponding clinical data to build classifiers for predicting severity. For functional profiling, gene set enrichment analysis (GSEA) was performed and normalised enrichment scores calculated.ResultsAfter data processing, 411 buccal and 391 rectal samples were analysed. The intestinal microbiome significantly differed for the RAC (Bray-Curtis, p value=0.009), mortality (Bray-Curtis, p value 0.006), length of hospital stay (Bray-Curtis, p=0.009) and severity (Bray-Curtis, p value=0.008). A classifier for severity with 16 different species and systemic inflammatory response syndrome achieved an area under the receiving operating characteristic (AUROC) of 85%, a positive predictive value of 67% and a negative predictive value of 94% outperforming established severity scores. GSEA revealed functional pathway units suggesting elevated short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production in severe AP.ConclusionsThe orointestinal microbiome predicts clinical hallmark features of AP, and SCFAs may be used for future diagnostic and therapeutic concepts.Trial registration numberNCT04777812.

Funder

University Medical Centre Goettingen

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Gastroenterology

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