作者
Juan A. Raygoza Garay,Williams Turpin,Sun-Ho Lee,Michelle I. Smith,Ashleigh Goethel,Anne M. Griffiths,Paul Moayyedi,Osvaldo Espin‐Garcia,Andrew D. Paterson,Guy Aumais,Çharles N. Bernstein,Irit Avni Biron,Maria Cino,Colette Deslandres,Iris Dotan,Wael El‐Matary,Brian G. Feagan,David S. Guttman,Hien Q. Huynh,Levinus A. Dieleman,Jeffrey S. Hyams,Kevan Jacobson,David Mack,John K. Marshall,Anthony Otley,Remo Panaccione,Mark J. Ropeleski,Mark S. Silverberg,A. Hillary Steinhart,Dan Turner,Baruch Yerushalmi,Andrew D. Paterson,Wei Xu,Kenneth Croitoru,Andrew D. Paterson,Paul L. Beck,Çharles N. Bernstein,Kenneth Croitoru,Levinus A. Dieleman,Brian G. Feagan,Anne M. Griffiths,David S. Guttman,Kevan Jacobson,Gilaad G. Kaplan,Denis O. Krause,Karen Madsen,John K. Marshall,Paul Moayyedi,Mark J. Ropeleski,Ernest G. Seidman,Mark S. Silverberg,Scott B. Snapper,Andy Stadnyk,Hillary Steinhart,Michael G. Surette,Dan Turner,T D Walters,Bruce A. Vallance,Guy Aumais,Alain Bitton,Maria Cino,Jeff Critch,Lee A. Denson,C Deslandres,Wael El‐Matary,Hans Herfarth,Peter Higgins,Hien Q. Huynh,Jeffrey S. Hyams,David Mack,Jerry McGrath,Anthony Otley,Remo Panancionne
摘要
Background & AimsThe cause of Crohn’s disease (CD) is unknown, but the current hypothesis is that microbial or environmental factors induce gut inflammation in genetically susceptible individuals, leading to chronic intestinal inflammation. Case-control studies of patients with CD have cataloged alterations in the gut microbiome composition; however, these studies fail to distinguish whether the altered gut microbiome composition is associated with initiation of CD or is the result of inflammation or drug treatment.MethodsIn this prospective cohort study, 3483 healthy first-degree relatives (FDRs) of patients with CD were recruited to identify the gut microbiome composition that precedes the onset of CD and to what extent this composition predicts the risk of developing CD. We applied a machine learning approach to the analysis of the gut microbiome composition (based on 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing) to define a microbial signature that associates with future development of CD. The performance of the model was assessed in an independent validation cohort.ResultsIn the validation cohort, the microbiome risk score (MRS) model yielded a hazard ratio of 2.24 (95% confidence interval, 1.03-4.84; P = .04), using the median of the MRS from the discovery cohort as the threshold. The MRS demonstrated a temporal validity by capturing individuals that developed CD up to 5 years before disease onset (area under the curve > 0.65). The 5 most important taxa contributing to the MRS included Ruminococcus torques, Blautia, Colidextribacter, an uncultured genus-level group from Oscillospiraceae, and Roseburia.ConclusionThis study is the first to demonstrate that gut microbiome composition is associated with future onset of CD and suggests that gut microbiome is a contributor in the pathogenesis of CD. The cause of Crohn’s disease (CD) is unknown, but the current hypothesis is that microbial or environmental factors induce gut inflammation in genetically susceptible individuals, leading to chronic intestinal inflammation. Case-control studies of patients with CD have cataloged alterations in the gut microbiome composition; however, these studies fail to distinguish whether the altered gut microbiome composition is associated with initiation of CD or is the result of inflammation or drug treatment. In this prospective cohort study, 3483 healthy first-degree relatives (FDRs) of patients with CD were recruited to identify the gut microbiome composition that precedes the onset of CD and to what extent this composition predicts the risk of developing CD. We applied a machine learning approach to the analysis of the gut microbiome composition (based on 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing) to define a microbial signature that associates with future development of CD. The performance of the model was assessed in an independent validation cohort. In the validation cohort, the microbiome risk score (MRS) model yielded a hazard ratio of 2.24 (95% confidence interval, 1.03-4.84; P = .04), using the median of the MRS from the discovery cohort as the threshold. The MRS demonstrated a temporal validity by capturing individuals that developed CD up to 5 years before disease onset (area under the curve > 0.65). The 5 most important taxa contributing to the MRS included Ruminococcus torques, Blautia, Colidextribacter, an uncultured genus-level group from Oscillospiraceae, and Roseburia. This study is the first to demonstrate that gut microbiome composition is associated with future onset of CD and suggests that gut microbiome is a contributor in the pathogenesis of CD.