AI Article Synopsis

  • The airway microbiome may influence the development and progression of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), but its impact on milder cases remains unclear.
  • The study analyzed sputum DNA from 877 participants, mostly with milder COPD (stages 0-2), to examine the relationship between microbiome characteristics and various health markers.
  • It found that greater diversity in the airway microbiome correlated with better lung function and fewer symptoms, while lower diversity was linked to worse outcomes, suggesting that microbiome features could help predict lung health over time.

Article Abstract

The airway microbiome has the potential to shape chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) pathogenesis, but its relationship to outcomes in milder disease is unestablished. To identify sputum microbiome characteristics associated with markers of COPD in participants of the Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures of COPD Study (SPIROMICS). Sputum DNA from 877 participants was analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing. Relationships between baseline airway microbiota composition and clinical, radiographic, and mucoinflammatory markers, including longitudinal lung function trajectory, were examined. Participant data represented predominantly milder disease (Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage 0-2 obstruction in 732 of 877 participants). Phylogenetic diversity (i.e., range of different species within a sample) correlated positively with baseline lung function, decreased with higher Global Initiative for Chronic Obstructive Lung Disease stage, and correlated negatively with symptom burden, radiographic markers of airway disease, and total mucin concentrations ( < 0.001). In covariate-adjusted regression models, organisms robustly associated with better lung function included , , and species. Conversely, lower lung function, greater symptoms, and radiographic measures of small airway disease were associated with enrichment in members of , , , and other genera. Baseline sputum microbiota features were also associated with lung function trajectory during SPIROMICS follow-up (stable/improved, decline, or rapid decline groups). The stable/improved group (slope of FEV regression ⩾66th percentile) had greater bacterial diversity at baseline associated with enrichment in , , and species. In contrast, the rapid decline group (FEV slope ⩽33rd percentile) had significantly lower baseline diversity associated with enrichment in species. In SPIROMICS, baseline airway microbiota features demonstrate divergent associations with better or worse COPD-related outcomes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11273318PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1164/rccm.202303-0489OCDOI Listing

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