Antibiotic Exposure, Not Alloreactivity, Is the Major Driver of Microbiome Changes in Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation
Rajat Bansal, Heekuk Park, Cristian Taborda, Christian Gordillo, Markus Y. Mapara, Amer Assal, Anne‐Catrin Uhlemann, Ran Reshef
Abstract
Both autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT) and allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT) are associated with significant alterations in the intestinal microbiome. The relative contributions of antibiotic use and alloreactivity to microbiome dynamics have not yet been elucidated, however. There is a lack of data on the kinetics of microbiome changes beyond 30 days post-transplantation and how they might differ between different transplantation modalities. A direct comparison of the differential effects of auto-HCT and allo-HCT on the microbiome may shed light on these dynamics. This study was conducted to compare intestinal microbial diversity between auto-HCT recipients and allo-HCT recipients from pre-transplantation to 100 days post-transplantation, and to examine the effect of antibiotics, transplant type (auto versus allo), and conditioning regimens on the dynamics of microbiome recovery. We conducted a longitudinal analysis of changes in the intestinal microbiome in 35 patients undergoing HCT (17 auto-HCT, 18 allo-HCT) at 4 time points: pre-conditioning and 14, 28, and 100 days post-transplantation. Granular data on antibiotic exposure from day -30 pre-transplantation to day +100 post-transplantation were collected. Pre-transplantation, allo-HCT recipients had lower α-diversity in the intestinal microbiome compared with auto-HCT recipients, which correlated with greater pre-transplantation antibiotic use in allo-HCT recipients. The microbiome diversity declined at days +14 and +28 post-transplantation in both cohorts but generally returned to baseline by day +100. Conditioning regimen intensity did not significantly affect post-transplantation α-diversity. Through differential abundance analysis, we show that commensal bacterial taxa involved with maintenance of gut epithelial integrity and production of short-chain fatty acids were depleted after both auto-HCT and allo-HCT. In our dataset, antibiotic exposure was the major driver of post-transplantation microbiome changes rather than alloreactivity, conditioning intensity, or immunosuppression. Our findings also suggest that interventions to limit microbiome injury, such as limiting the use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, should target the pre-transplantation period and not only the peri-transplantation period.