Elgin Timothy G, Kern Stacy L, McElroy Steven J
Stead Family Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatology, University of Iowa Children's Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa.
Stead Family Department of Pediatrics, Division of Neonatology, University of Iowa Children's Hospital, Iowa City, Iowa.
Clin Ther. 2016 Apr;38(4):706-15. doi: 10.1016/j.clinthera.2016.01.005. Epub 2016 Feb 3.
Neonatal necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) remains the most devastating gastrointestinal disease for premature infants. In the United States alone, NEC affects >4000 premature infants yearly, has a mortality rate of nearly 33%, and costs the health care system >$1 billion annually. Although NEC has been actively researched for several decades, its pathophysiology remains elusive. One potential mechanism suggests that disruption of the normal neonatal intestinal bacterial flora induces a proinflammatory state, allowing translocation of pathogens across the intestinal epithelia. Disruption of the normal intestinal flora (dysbiosis) is associated with many human diseases. Thus, it is a reasonable hypothesis that dysbiosis may play an important role in the development of NEC. This hypothesis is supported by evidence that probiotic use in premature infants can prevent the development of NEC. Although the role of probiotics and NEC is covered in other reviews, this review instead focuses on normal bacterial colonization in both term and preterm infants and on the association of dysbiosis and the development of NEC.
PubMed was queried with the use of the following key search terms: NEC, neonatal microbiome, fetal microbiome, maternal microbiome, neonatal dysbiosis, and microbiome ontogeny. Relevant literature was reviewed and selected for inclusion in accordance with the objectives of the article according to the authors' discretion. Articles that made key salient points in review articles were further pulled from PubMed.
Although the onset of NEC is thought to involve bacteria, the mechanisms behind their involvement remain unclear. Research to date has failed to identify a single causative organism, and current theories and data now indicate that a disruption of the host intestinal flora is associated with the onset of disease. Recent reports have found that a bloom of Proteobacteria, specifically Enterobacteriacae species, occurs just before the diagnosis of NEC. Whether this is a causative event or merely a marker of intestinal disease is still unclear.
Because of the complexity of these interactions, it is vital that we continue to investigate the host-bacterial axis in the developing intestine in both humans and in animal models.
新生儿坏死性小肠结肠炎(NEC)仍然是早产儿最具毁灭性的胃肠道疾病。仅在美国,每年就有超过4000名早产儿受NEC影响,死亡率近33%,每年给医疗系统造成的成本超过10亿美元。尽管对NEC已经进行了数十年的积极研究,但其病理生理学仍然难以捉摸。一种潜在机制表明,正常新生儿肠道细菌菌群的破坏会引发促炎状态,使病原体能够穿过肠道上皮细胞发生易位。正常肠道菌群的破坏(生态失调)与许多人类疾病有关。因此,生态失调可能在NEC的发生发展中起重要作用,这是一个合理的假设。这一假设得到了以下证据的支持:在早产儿中使用益生菌可以预防NEC的发生。虽然其他综述涵盖了益生菌与NEC的作用,但本综述重点关注足月儿和早产儿的正常细菌定植以及生态失调与NEC发生发展的关联。
使用以下关键搜索词查询PubMed:NEC、新生儿微生物组、胎儿微生物组、母体微生物组、新生儿生态失调和微生物组个体发生。根据作者的判断,对相关文献进行了综述,并根据文章的目标选择纳入。在综述文章中提出关键要点的文章进一步从PubMed中提取。
虽然认为NEC的发病涉及细菌,但其背后的机制仍不清楚。迄今为止的研究未能确定单一的致病生物体,目前的理论和数据表明,宿主肠道菌群的破坏与疾病的发生有关。最近的报告发现,在NEC诊断前,变形菌门,特别是肠杆菌科细菌大量繁殖。这是一个致病事件还是仅仅是肠道疾病的一个标志仍不清楚。
由于这些相互作用的复杂性,我们继续在人类和动物模型中研究发育中肠道的宿主 - 细菌轴至关重要。