Abstract

BackgroundChildren with oropharyngeal dysphagia have impaired airway protection mechanisms and are at higher risk for pneumonia and other pulmonary complications. Aspiration of gastric contents is often implicated as a cause for these pulmonary complications, despite being supported by little evidence. The goal of this study is to determine the relative contribution of oropharyngeal and gastric microbial communities to perturbations in the lung microbiome of children with and without oropharyngeal dysphagia and aspiration.MethodsWe conducted a prospective cohort study of 220 patients consecutively recruited from a tertiary aerodigestive center undergoing simultaneous esophagogastroduodenoscopy and flexible bronchoscopy. Bronchoalveolar lavage, gastric and oropharyngeal samples were collected from all recruited patients and 16S sequencing was performed. A subset of 104 patients also underwent video fluoroscopic swallow studies to assess swallow function and were categorized as aspiration/no aspiration. To ensure the validity of the results, we compared the microbiome of these aerodigestive patients to the microbiome of pediatric patients recruited to a longitudinal cohort study of children with suspected GERD; patients recruited to this study had oropharyngeal, gastric and/or stool samples available. The relationships between microbial communities across the aerodigestive tract were described by analyzing within- and between-patient beta diversities and identifying taxa which are exchanged between aerodigestive sites within patients. These relationships were then compared in patients with and without aspiration to evaluate the effect of aspiration on the aerodigestive microbiome.ResultsWithin all patients, lung, oropharyngeal and gastric microbiomes overlap. The degree of similarity is the lowest between the oropharynx and lungs (median Jensen-Shannon distance (JSD) = 0.90), and as high between the stomach and lungs as between the oropharynx and stomach (median JSD = 0.56 for both; p = 0.6). Unlike the oropharyngeal microbiome, lung and gastric communities are highly variable across people and driven primarily by person rather than body site. In patients with aspiration, the lung microbiome more closely resembles oropharyngeal rather than gastric communities and there is greater prevalence of microbial exchange between the lung and oropharynx than between gastric and lung sites (p = 0.04 and 4x10−5, respectively).ConclusionsThe gastric and lung microbiomes display significant overlap in patients with intact airway protective mechanisms while the lung and oropharynx remain distinct. In patients with impaired swallow function and aspiration, the lung microbiome shifts towards oropharyngeal rather than gastric communities. This finding may explain why antireflux surgeries fail to show benefit in pediatric pulmonary outcomes.

Highlights

  • The economic and social impact of oropharyngeal dysfunction and aspiration is well known in the adult stroke population; adults with oropharyngeal dysfunction are at greater risk of pneumonia than those without [1]

  • Little is known about aspiration-related lung disease in children, though recent studies suggest that up to 10% of all pneumonia hospitalizations in pediatrics are related to aspiration [2]

  • Despite this common surgical practice [5, 6], there are no pediatric studies which conclusively show improved pulmonary outcomes after fundoplication, suggesting that the respiratory symptoms seen in aspirating patients may not be related to aspiration of gastric contents [7, 8, 9, 10, 11]

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Summary

Introduction

The economic and social impact of oropharyngeal dysfunction and aspiration is well known in the adult stroke population; adults with oropharyngeal dysfunction are at greater risk of pneumonia than those without [1]. Little is known about aspiration-related lung disease in children, though recent studies suggest that up to 10% of all pneumonia hospitalizations in pediatrics are related to aspiration [2] Clinicians often assume these pneumonias result from the aspiration of refluxed gastric contents and frequently treat these children with antireflux surgery, fundoplication [3, 4]. An alternative hypothesis is that aspiration-related respiratory symptoms may result from aspirated oropharyngeal contents To test this hypothesis, we determined the microbial signatures of the lungs, stomach, and oropharynx in children with and without oropharyngeal dysphagia (i.e. with and without impaired airway protective mechanisms) to determine the relative contributions of the oropharyngeal and gastric microbiomes to the lung microbiome. The goal of this study is to determine the relative contribution of oropharyngeal and gastric microbial communities to perturbations in the lung microbiome of children with and without oropharyngeal dysphagia and aspiration.

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