Elvers Karen T, Wilson Victoria J, Hammond Ashley, Duncan Lorna, Huntley Alyson L, Hay Alastair D, van der Werf Esther T
Centre for Academic Primare Care & NIHR Health Protection Research Unit in Behavioural Science and Evaluation, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Centre of Academic Primary Care, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
BMJ Open. 2020 Sep 21;10(9):e035677. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035677.
The gut microbiota influences many aspects of human health. We investigated the magnitude and duration of changes in gut microbiota in response to antibiotics commonly prescribed in UK primary care.
We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE and AMED, all years up to May 2020 including all study designs, collecting and analysing data on the effect of antibiotics prescribed for respiratory and urinary tract infections. We followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses and Cochrane standard methods. Risk of bias was evaluated using the Critical Appraisal Skills Programme. Narrative synthesis was used to report the themes emerging from the data.
Primary outcomes were antibiotic-induced changes in the composition and/or diversity of the gut microbiota. Secondary outcome was the time for the microbiota to return to baseline.
Thirty-one articles with low or unclear risk of bias showed that antibiotics impact the gut microbiota by causing rapid and diminished levels of bacterial diversity and changes in relative abundances. After cessation of treatment, gut bacteria recover, in most individuals, to their baseline state within a few weeks. Some studies suggested longer term effects from 2 to 6 months. Considerable heterogeneity in methodology makes the studies prone to biases and other confounding factors. Doxycycline was associated with a marked short-term decrease in diversity. Clarithromycin decreased the populations of Enterobacteria, and the anaerobic bacteria sp and sp in numbers and diversity for up to 5 weeks. Phenoxymethylpenicillin, nitrofurantoin and amoxicillin had very little effect on the gut microbiome.
Despite substantial heterogeneity of the studies and small sample sizes, there is evidence that antibiotics commonly used in primary care influence the composition of the gastrointestinal microbiota. Larger population-based studies are needed to fully understand how antibiotics modulate the microbiota, and to determine if these are associated with (longer term) health consequences.
CRD42017073750.
肠道微生物群影响人类健康的多个方面。我们调查了英国初级医疗中常用抗生素对肠道微生物群变化的程度和持续时间。
我们检索了截至2020年5月的MEDLINE、EMBASE和AMED,涵盖所有年份,包括所有研究设计,收集并分析关于用于呼吸道和泌尿道感染的抗生素效果的数据。我们遵循系统评价和Meta分析的首选报告项目以及Cochrane标准方法。使用批判性评估技能计划评估偏倚风险。采用叙述性综合分析来报告数据中出现的主题。
主要结局是抗生素引起的肠道微生物群组成和/或多样性的变化。次要结局是微生物群恢复到基线水平的时间。
31篇偏倚风险低或不明确的文章表明,抗生素通过导致细菌多样性水平迅速下降和相对丰度变化来影响肠道微生物群。治疗停止后,大多数个体的肠道细菌在几周内恢复到基线状态。一些研究表明存在2至6个月的长期影响。方法上的显著异质性使这些研究容易出现偏倚和其他混杂因素。强力霉素与多样性的显著短期下降有关。克拉霉素使肠杆菌数量以及厌氧细菌属和属的数量和多样性在长达5周的时间内减少。青霉素V钾、呋喃妥因和阿莫西林对肠道微生物组影响很小。
尽管研究存在很大异质性且样本量较小,但有证据表明初级医疗中常用的抗生素会影响胃肠道微生物群的组成。需要开展更大规模的基于人群的研究,以全面了解抗生素如何调节微生物群,并确定这些是否与(长期)健康后果相关。
PROSPERO注册号:CRD42017073750。