In this issue of Blood, Miltiadous et al report on the association between the early posttransplant gut microbiome and immune cell reconstitution in 894 recipients of an allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT).1 They examined 2067 stool samples for intestinal microbiota using amplicon sequencing and 2370 peripheral blood samples for immune cell recovery using flow cytometry. The 3 stem cell sources used for the transplants—unmodified bone marrow, unmodified peripheral blood stem cells (PBSCs), and CD34-selected PBSC grafts—were studied separately. The authors found that diversity in fecal microbiota was predictive of CD4+ T-cell counts at 3 months in the CD34-selected cohort. In addition, higher relative abundance of fecal Staphylococcus in the early post-HCT period predicted worse subsequent CD4+ T-cell recovery.
Robust reconstitution of donor immune cells is essential for successful clinical outcomes after allo-HCT.2 Delay in immune reconstitution is associated with increased risk of serious infections and higher mortality.2,3 In addition, the reconstitution kinetics of distinct immune cell subsets has a significant influence on clinical outcomes. Early recovery of total CD4+ and naïve CD4+ T cells predicts lower risks of infections, chronic graft-versus-host disease (cGVHD), and transplant-related mortality (TRM),3 whereas rapid reconstitution of regulatory T cells is associated with lower risk of cGVHD. Early recovery of CD8+ T cells after transplantation can reduce the risk of infections and relapse, but it predicts a higher risk of acute GVHD (aGVHD). Rapid recovery of γδ T cells is associated with lower risks of infections and relapse. Early recovery of natural killer cells predicts lower risk of relapse and higher risk of GVHD. Stronger responses to vaccinations with lower rates of infections and TRM have been linked to earlier reconstitution of B cells.
Donor type, graft source, T-cell depletion, and GVHD prophylaxis type are among established factors that can influence immune reconstitution.2,3 More recently, several preclinical and observational studies have highlighted the potential effect of intestinal microbiota on immune reconstitution after transplantation.4,5 Exposure to antibiotics, changes in nutrition, and conditioning-related impairment of the gut barrier all cause damage to the gut microbiota. This damage can be measured in various ways, including α diversity, abundance of specific taxa, microbial network structures, community-level metabolic function, and antibiotic-resistant gene content. When patients are referred for allo-HCT, their gut microbiota is often already perturbed,5 a finding that can be traced back to when patients received chemotherapy for their underlying hematologic disease.6 Unresolved previous injuries are worsened during allo-HCT in many patients, resulting in mono- or oligo-dominated communities with low diversity at the time of engraftment.5 In a large multicenter study, lower diversity of peri-engraftment intestinal microbiota was associated with higher TRM in patients receiving a T-cell replete graft.5
Although these studies indicate a strong association between the diversity of microbiota and transplantation outcomes, the presence and nature of a causal link have remained obscure. TRM can be the result of various causes including infection, organ failure, and GVHD. Indeed, decreased diversity of peri-engraftment intestinal microbiota predicts higher risk of aGVHD and its associated mortality.7 The potential contribution of microbiota injury to each of the various causes of TRM is unknown. There is a mutual interaction between the immune system and the gut microbiota. The gut microbiota can modulate cytokine release from immune cells,8 and microbiota-derived metabolites contribute to steady-state granulopoiesis. In return, the immune cells can modulate the mucosal bacteria by immunoglobulin A. In a murine model, antibiotic therapy resulted in delayed lymphocyte and granulocyte reconstitution after allo-HCT because of reduced sucrose production by the gut microbiota.4 Sucrose supplementation led to stimulation of hematopoiesis and improved neutrophil recovery.
Importantly, Miltiadous et al adjusted their analysis for several potential confounders including age, graft source, GVHD prophylaxis, cytomegalovirus reactivation, exposure to anti-thymocyte globulin, and use of high-dose steroids. One question that can be explored further is the potential contribution of antibiotics to microbiota diversity, composition, and count recovery. Specifically, could the observed association between microbiota and immune reconstitution be mediated or even confounded by antibiotics? Some antibiotics commonly used in the setting of allo-HCT (eg, linezolid) can suppress hematopoiesis and Staphylococcus. In a previous study,9 the abundance of Staphylococcus was positively associated with lymphocyte counts obtained from routine complete blood cell counts. The Miltiadous et al study used more granular data on immune cell subsets from flow cytometry. The observation that Staphylococcus was associated with a worse reconstitution of CD4+ T cells in their study but higher total lymphocyte counts in the previous study is worth further research. Does this reflect a potential positive impact of Staphylococcus on other lymphocyte subsets not evaluated in their current study? What is the function and clinical impact of those subsets? Different species and strains of the same genus often have different physiology and effects on the host. Such effects cannot be reliably inferred from genus-level data generated from amplicon sequencing.
What should the path forward be and how could the findings in this study improve clinical practice? Microbial community-level interventions such as transplantation of fecal microbiota can restore the diversity of the microbiota and eradicate antibiotic-resistant genes.10 However, the emergent properties of the new communities (potentially with different network structures and composition) in relation to host physiology and HCT outcomes are largely unknown. Precisely defined microbiota interventions (eg, single taxon probiotics) try to restore a specific beneficial taxon within a large community of bacteria that has undergone major disruptions. However, it remains unknown whether the impact (if any) of such interventions is clinically meaningful. Nonetheless, alternative methods such as shotgun sequencing can be attempted in follow-up studies to delineate specific species and strains within the same promising genera that may mediate microbiota associations with immune reconstitution. Ultimately, it seems important to validate findings in other centers using different antibiotic and non-antibiotic practices before clinical therapeutics can be developed.
Conflict-of-interest disclosure: N.B. has served as a consultant or had an advisory role with Medexus Pharmaceuticals, Magenta Therapeutics, and CTI BioPharma. A.R. declares no competing financial interests.
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