Microbiome Poster Presentation

P0679 - The gut microbiota: a case-control study of children with multiple sclerosis, monophasic acquired demyelinating syndromes and unaffected controls (ID 102)

Speakers
  • H. Tremlett
Authors
  • F. Zhu
  • D. Arnold
  • A. Bar-Or
  • C. Bernstein
  • J. Forbes
  • M. Graham
  • J. Hart
  • N. Knox
  • R. Marrie
  • A. Mirza
  • J. O’mahony
  • G. Van Domselaar
  • E. Yeh
  • Y. Zhao
  • B. Banwell
  • E. Waubant
Presentation Number
P0679
Presentation Topic
Microbiome

Abstract

Background

The gut microbiota may influence multiple sclerosis (MS) onset. Pediatric MS offers the opportunity to examine pathological processes close to risk acquisition.

Objectives

To examine the gut microbiota from stool samples of persons with pediatric onset MS, or monophasic acquired demyelinating syndromes (ADS) and unaffected controls in a case-control study.

Methods

Persons ≤21 years old with symptom onset <18 years of age with either MS (McDonald criteria) or ADS were eligible, as were unaffected controls with no known neurological or immune-mediated condition (migraine, asthma/allergies were permissible) were enrolled via the Canadian Pediatric Demyelinating Disease Network. Stools were collected between Nov/2015–Mar/2018, shipped on ice, and stored at -80°C. The 16S ribosomal RNA gene (V4 region) was amplified from extracted DNA and sequenced via the Illumina MiSeq platform. Amplicon sequence variants were used to compare the gut microbiota by disease status (MS/ADS/controls). The MS cases were also compared by disease-modifying drug (DMD) status (exposed/naïve). Negative binomial regression was used for genus-level analyses, with rate ratios adjusted (aRR) for age and sex.

Results

Of the 32/41/36 included MS/ADS/control participants, 24/23/21 were girls, averaging age 16.5/13.8/15.1 years at stool sample, respectively. The MS/ADS cases were 14.0/6.9 years at symptom onset. The 3 groups (MS/ADS/controls) were relatively similar for: body mass index (median: 22.8/19.7/19.9), presence of constipation (number of participants with a Bristol Stool Scale score of 1 or 2=8/9/7) and diet (% caloric intake for fat (median)=34/35/34 and for fibre (median)=9/10/11 g/day). Nine MS cases (28%) were DMD naïve. Gut microbiota diversity (alpha and beta) did not differ by disease (MS/ADS/controls), or DMD status (all p>0.1), while taxa-level findings did. For example, relative abundance of the Proteobacteria, Sutterella was depleted for MS cases vs controls and MS vs ADS cases (aRR:0.13;95%CI:0.03–0.59 and 0.21;95%CI:0.05–0.98), but did not differ for the ADS cases vs controls or by DMD status for the MS cases (all p>0.1). Several of the butyrate-producing genera within the Clostridia class (Firmicutes phylum) —Ruminococcaceae UCG−003, Lachnospiraceae UCG−008 and UCG−004—exhibited similar patterns.

Conclusions

Gut microbiota diversity was similar for individuals with pediatric MS relative to either monophasic ADS or unaffected controls. However, at the taxa-level, differences were observed which differentiated the MS cases from the monophasic ADS cases and controls.

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