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Engineering the Microbiome to Prevent Adverse Events: Challenges and Opportunities

Saad Khan, Ruth Hauptman, Libusha Kelly

2020The Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the past decade of microbiome research, we have learned about numerous adverse interactions between the microbiome and medical interventions such as drugs, radiation, and surgery. What if we could alter our microbiomes to prevent these events? In this review, we discuss potential routes to mitigate microbiome adverse events, including applications from the emerging field of microbiome engineering. We highlight cases where the microbiome acts directly on a treatment, such as via differential drug metabolism, and cases where a treatment directly harms the microbiome, such as in radiation therapy. Understanding and preventing microbiome adverse events is a difficult challenge that will require a data-driven approach involving causal statistics, multiomics techniques, and a personalized means of mitigating adverse events. We propose research considerations to encourage productive work in preventing microbiome adverse events, and we highlight the many challenges and opportunities that await.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeAdverse effectHuman Microbiome ProjectHuman microbiomeIntensive care medicineMedicineBioinformaticsRisk analysis (engineering)Data scienceBiologyComputer sciencePharmacologyGut microbiota and healthClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchPharmacogenetics and Drug Metabolism
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