Abstract

The fecal microbiota and metabolome are hypothesized to be altered before late-onset neonatal meningitis (LOM), in analogy to late-onset sepsis (LOS). The present study aimed to identify fecal microbiota composition and volatile metabolomics preceding LOM. Cases and gestational age-matched controls were selected from a prospective, longitudinal preterm cohort study (born <30 weeks' gestation) at nine neonatal intensive care units. The microbial composition (16S rRNA sequencing) and volatile metabolome (gas chromatography-ion mobility spectrometry (GC-IMS) and GC-time-of-flight-mass spectrometry (GC-TOF-MS)), were analyzed in fecal samples 1-10 days pre-LOM. Of 1397 included infants, 21 were diagnosed with LOM (1.5%), and 19 with concomitant LOS (90%). Random Forest classification and MaAsLin2 analysis found similar microbiota features contribute to the discrimination of fecal pre-LOM samples versus controls. A Random Forest model based on six microbiota features accurately predicts LOM 1-3 days before diagnosis with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.88 (n=147). Pattern recognition analysis by GC-IMS revealed an AUC of 0.70-0.76 (P<0.05) in the three days pre-LOM (n=92). No single discriminative metabolites were identified by GC-TOF-MS (n=66). Infants with LOM could be accurately discriminated from controls based on preclinical microbiota composition, while alterations in the volatile metabolome were moderately associated with preclinical LOM.

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