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  • Mücke, Marcus Maximilian (2)
  • Mücke, Victoria T. (2)
  • Zeuzem, Stefan (2)
  • Basic, Michael (1)
  • Berger, Annemarie (1)
  • Dietz, Julia (1)
  • Finkelmeier, Fabian (1)
  • Görgülü, Esra (1)
  • Hildt, Eberhard (1)
  • Kehrmann, Jan (1)
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  • 2020 (1)
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  • Article (2)

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Keywords

  • Bacterial abundance (1)
  • Enterobacteriaceae (1)
  • HBV (1)
  • Infections (1)
  • Multidrug-resistance (1)
  • Quinolones (1)
  • co-infection (1)
  • core expression (1)
  • genotype G (1)
  • prevalence (1)
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Stool and sputum microbiome during quinolone prophylaxis of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis: an exploratory study (2020)
Mücke, Marcus Maximilian ; Rüschenbaum, Sabrina ; Mayer, Amelie ; Mücke, Victoria T. ; Schwarzkopf, Katharina M. ; Zeuzem, Stefan ; Kehrmann, Jan ; Scholtysik, René ; Lange, Christian M.
Introduction: Quinolone prophylaxis is recommended for patients with advanced cirrhosis at high risk of spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP) or with prior SBP. Yet, the impact of long-term antibiotic prophylaxis on the microbiome of these patients is poorly characterized. Methods: Patients with liver cirrhosis receiving long-term quinolone prophylaxis to prevent SBP were prospectively included and sputum and stool samples were obtained at baseline, 1, 4 and 12 weeks thereafter. Both bacterial DNA and RNA were assessed with 16S rRNA sequencing. Relative abundance, alpha and beta diversity were calculated and correlated with clinical outcome. Results: Overall, 35 stool and 19 sputum samples were obtained from 11 patients. Two patients died (day 9 and 12) all others were followed for 180 days. Reduction of Shannon diversity and bacterial richness was insignificant after initiation of quinolone prophylaxis (p > 0.05). Gut microbiota were significantly different between patients (p < 0.001) but non-significantly altered between the different time points before and after initiation of antibiotic prophylaxis (p > 0.05). A high relative abundance of Enterobacteriaceae > 20% during quinolone prophylaxis was found in three patients. Specific clinical scenarios (development of secondary infections during antibiotic prophylaxis or the detection of multidrug-resistant Enterobacteriaceae) characterized these patients. Sputum microbiota were not significantly altered in individuals during prophylaxis. Conclusion: The present exploratory study with small sample size showed that inter-individual differences in diversity of gut microbiota were high at baseline, yet quinolone prophylaxis had only a moderate impact. High relative abundances of Enterobacteriaceae during follow-up might indicate failure of or non-adherence to quinolone prophylaxis. However, our results may not be clinically significant given the limitations of the study and therefore future studies are needed to further investigate this phenomenon.
Not uncommon: HBV genotype G co-infections among healthy European HBV carriers with genotype A and E infection (2021)
Basic, Michael ; Kubesch, Alica ; Kuhnhenn, Lisa ; Görgülü, Esra ; Finkelmeier, Fabian ; Dietz, Julia ; Knabe, Mate ; Mücke, Victoria T. ; Mücke, Marcus Maximilian ; Berger, Annemarie ; Zeuzem, Stefan ; Sarrazin, Christoph ; Hildt, Eberhard ; Peiffer, Kai-Henrik
Background & Aims: HBV genotype G (HBV/G) is mainly found in co-infections with other HBV genotypes and was identified as an independent risk factor for liver fibrosis. This study aimed to analyse the prevalence of HBV/G co-infections in healthy European HBV carriers and to characterize the crosstalk of HBV/G with other genotypes. Methods: A total of 560 European HBV carriers were tested via HBV/G-specific PCR for HBV/G co-infections. Quasispecies distribution was analysed via deep sequencing, and the clinical phenotype was characterized regarding qHBsAg-/HBV-DNA levels and frequent mutations. Replicative capacity and expression of HBsAg/core was studied in hepatoma cells co-expressing HBV/G with either HBV/A, HBV/D or HBV/E using bicistronic vectors. Results: Although no HBV/G co-infection was found by routine genotyping PCR, HBV/G was detected by specific PCR in 4%-8% of patients infected with either HBV/A or HBV/E but only infrequently in other genotypes. In contrast to HBV/E, HBV/G was found as the quasispecies major variant in co-infections with HBV/A. No differences in the clinical phenotype were observed for HBV/G co-infections. In vitro RNA and DNA levels were comparable among all genotypes, but expression and release of HBsAg was reduced in co-expression of HBV/G with HBV/E. In co-expression with HBV/A and HBV/E expression of HBV/G-specific core was enhanced while core expression from the corresponding genotype was markedly diminished. Conclusions: HBV/G co-infections are common in European inactive carriers with HBV/A and HBV/E infection, but sufficient detection depends strongly on the assay. HBV/G regulated core expression might play a critical role for survival of HBV/G in co-infections.
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