Litcius/Paper detail

Pharma[e]cology: How the Gut Microbiome Contributes to Variations in Drug Response

Kai Trepka, C. Anders Olson, Vaibhav Upadhyay, Chen Zhang, Peter J. Turnbaugh

2024The Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Drugs represent our first, and sometimes last, line of defense for many diseases, yet despite decades of research we still do not fully understand why a given drug works in one patient and fails in the next. The human gut microbiome is one of the missing puzzle pieces, due to its ability to parallel and extend host pathways for drug metabolism, along with more complex host-microbiome interactions. Herein, we focus on the well-established links between the gut microbiome and drugs for heart disease and cancer, plus emerging data on neurological disease. We highlight the interdisciplinary methods that are available and how they can be used to address major remaining knowledge gaps, including the consequences of microbial drug metabolism for treatment outcomes. Continued progress in this area promises fundamental biological insights into humans and their associated microbial communities and strategies for leveraging the microbiome to improve the practice of medicine.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeGut microbiomeDiseaseDrugHuman microbiomeComputational biologyBiologyBioinformaticsMedicinePharmacologyPathologyGut microbiota and healthDiet and metabolism studiesTryptophan and brain disorders