AI Article Synopsis

  • Autologous fecal microbiota transplantation (aFMT) combined with a high-polyphenol Mediterranean diet helped prevent weight regain and insulin rebound after participants lost weight over six months.
  • The study analyzed the gut microbiome of 82 obese participants to see how changes in core (abundant) and non-core (low-abundance) gut bacteria during weight loss influenced their ability to maintain weight after aFMT treatment.
  • Results showed that participants with minimal changes in core bacteria and significant changes in non-core bacteria were more successful in avoiding weight regain, highlighting the importance of non-core taxa in weight maintenance post-aFMT.

Article Abstract

We previously reported that autologous-fecal-microbiota-transplantation (aFMT), following 6 m of lifestyle intervention, attenuated subsequent weight regain and insulin rebound for participants consuming a high-polyphenol green-Mediterranean diet. Here, we explored whether specific changes in the core (abundant) vs. non-core (low-abundance) gut microbiome taxa fractions during the weight-loss phase (0-6 m) were differentially associated with weight maintenance following aFMT. Eighty-two abdominally obese/dyslipidemic participants (age = 52 years; 6 m weightloss = -8.3 kg) who provided fecal samples (0 m, 6 m) were included. Frozen 6 m's fecal samples were processed into 1 g, opaque and odorless aFMT capsules. Participants were randomly assigned to receive 100 capsules containing their own fecal microbiota or placebo over 8 m-14 m in ten administrations (adherence rate > 90%). Gut microbiome composition was evaluated using shotgun metagenomic sequencing. Non-core taxa were defined as ≤ 66% prevalence across participants. Overall, 450 species were analyzed. At baseline, 13.3% were classified as core, and Firmicutes presented the highest core proportion by phylum. During 6 m weight-loss phase, abundance of non-core species changed more than core species ( < .0001). Subject-specific changes in core and non-core taxa fractions were strongly correlated (Jaccard Index;  = 0.54;  < .001). Following aFMT treatment, only participants with a low 6 m change in core taxa, and a high change in non-core taxa, avoided 8-14 m weight regain (aFMT = -0.58 ± 2.4 kg, corresponding placebo group = 3.18 ± 3.5 kg;  = .02). In a linear regression model, 6 m change was the only combination that was significantly associated with attenuated 8-14 m weight regain ( = .038;  = .002 for taxa patterns/treatment intervention interaction). High change in non-core, low-abundance taxa during weight-loss might mediate aFMT treatment success for weight loss maintenance. NCT03020186.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10557561PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2023.2264457DOI Listing

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