Open label vancomycin in primary sclerosing cholangitis-inflammatory bowel disease: improved colonic disease activity and associations with changes in host-microbiome-metabolomic signatures.
Author
Quraishi, Mohammed NabilCheesbrough, Jonathan
Rimmer, Peter
Mullish, Benjamin H
Sharma, Naveen
Efstathiou, Elena
Acharjee, Animesh
Gkoutus, Georgios
Patel, Arzoo
Marchesi, Julian R
Camuzeaux, Stephane
Chappell, Katie
Valdivia-Garcia, Maria A
Ferguson, James
Brookes, Matthew
Walmsley, Martine
Rossiter, Amanda
van Schaik, Willem
McInnes, Ross S
Cooney, Rachel
Trauner, Michael
Beggs, Andrew
Iqbal, Tariq
Trivedi, Palak J
Publication date
2024-12-14
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: We conducted a single-arm interventional study, to explore mucosal changes associated with clinical remission under oral vancomycin (OV) treatment, in primary sclerosing cholangitis associated inflammatory bowel disease (PSC-IBD); NCT05376228. Method: Fifteen patients with PSC and active colitis (median faecal calprotectin 459µg/g; median total Mayo score 5) were treated with OV (125mg QID) for 4 weeks and followed-up for a further 4 weeks of treatment withdrawal (8 weeks, end-of-study). Colonic biopsies were obtained at baseline and week 4. Clinical assessments, and serum and stool samples (metagenomics, metatranscriptomics and metabolomics) were collected at weeks 0, 2, 4 and 8. The primary efficacy outcome measure was induction of clinical remission. Results: OV resulted in clinical remission in 12/15 patients and significant reductions in faecal calprotectin. OV was associated with reduced abundances of Lachnospiraceae, genera Blautia and Bacteroides; and enrichment of Enterobacteriaceae, and genera Veillonella, Akkermansia and Escherichia. OV treatment was associated with downregulation of multiple metatranscriptomic pathways (including short chain fatty acid [SCFA] metabolism and bile acid [BA] biotransformation), along with host genes and multiple pathways involved in inflammatory responses and antimicrobial defence; and an upregulation of genes associated with extracellular matrix repair. OV use resulted in loss of specific faecal SCFAs and secondary BAs, including lithocholic acid derivatives. Colitis activity relapsed following OV withdrawal, with host mucosal and microbial changes trending towards baseline. Conclusion: Four weeks of OV induces remission in PSC-IBD activity, associated with a reduction in gut bacterial diversity and compositional changes relating to BA and SCFA homeostasis.Citation
Quraishi MN, Cheesbrough J, Rimmer P, Mullish BH, Sharma N, Efstathiou E, Acharjee A, Gkoutus G, Patel A, Marchesi JR, Camuzeaux S, Chappell K, Valdivia-Garcia MA, Ferguson J, Brookes M, Walmsley M, Rossiter A, van Schaik W, McInnes RS, Cooney R, Trauner M, Beggs A, Iqbal T, Trivedi PJ. Open label vancomycin in primary sclerosing cholangitis-inflammatory bowel disease: improved colonic disease activity and associations with changes in host-microbiome-metabolomic signatures. J Crohns Colitis. 2024 Dec 14:jjae189. doi: 10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjae189. Epub ahead of print.Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://academic.oup.com/ecco-jccPMID
39673746Journal
Journal of Crohn's & colitisPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/ecco-jcc/jjae189