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Distinct Clinical Pathology and Microbiota in Chronic Rhinosinusitis With Nasal Polyps Endotypes

Elrayah Abbas, Chuan Li, Ao Xie, Shan Lu, Li Tang, Yinhui Liu, Ayman Elfadil, Wen Shu

2020The Laryngoscope44 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES/HYPOTHESIS: Eosinophilic and noneosinophilic chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (ECRSwNP and NECRSwNP) show distinguished clinical pathology, but their underlying mechanism remains unclear. We aimed to investigate the clinical, hematological, and histopathological changes in chronic rhinosinusitis with nasal polyps (CRSwNP) endotypes and its association with microbiota. STUDY DESIGN: A comparative cross-sectional study. METHODS: A comparative study of 46 patients with CRSwNP (34.69 ± 16.39 years old) who underwent endoscopic sinus surgery were recruited and subdivided into ECRSwNP and NECRSwNP groups based on eosinophilic tissue inflammation; 12 healthy controls were also included. A structured histopathological analysis was conducted, and complete blood count was determined in patients. Endoscopic-guided middle meatus swabs and fecal samples were collected from the patients and controls and subsequently subjected to 16S rRNA gene sequencing on Illumina MiSeq. RESULTS: Compared to NECRSwNP, ECRSwNP showed a statistically significant increase in the computed tomography score, endoscopic score, blood eosinophil percentage, tissue eosinophil count, inflammation degree, subepithelial edema, and eosinophil aggregation. Airway microbiota communities differed among the three groups. The abundance of Moraxella and Parvimonas was significantly higher in the ECRSwNP group. Distinct microbiota dysbiosis in CRSwNP endotypes was found to be correlated with different clinical pathologies. Moreover, the gut microbiota in ECRSwNP and NECRSwNP showed dysbiosis, that is, significant decrease in the abundance of Actinobacteria in the former and significant increase in the abundance of Enterobacterales and several genera in NECRSwNP. CONCLUSIONS: Significant clinical pathology and microbiota changes were evident in patients with ECRSwNP and NECRSwNP. Distinct microbiota dysbiosis was correlated with different clinical pathologies. Understanding these differences may improve the prognosis and treatment of chronic rhinosinusitis. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: 4 Laryngoscope, 131:E34-E44, 2021.

Topics & Concepts

Nasal polypsDysbiosisEosinophilMedicineMicrobiomeEosinophilicEosinophiliaPathologyInternal medicineGastroenterologyGut floraImmunologyAsthmaBiologyBioinformaticsSinusitis and nasal conditionsOtolaryngology and Infectious DiseasesCystic Fibrosis Research Advances
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