Abstract
BackgroundGlucose hydrogen breath testing is a noninvasive test for small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO). A positive glucose hydrogen breath test is common in children from low-income countries and has been found to be associated with malnutrition as measured by stunted growth. The microbiome associated with positive breath testing is relatively unstudied.MethodsWe performed 16 S V4 rDNA microbiome analysis on the stool of 90 Bangladeshi children aged 2 years from an impoverished neighborhood who were tested at the same time for SIBO by glucose hydrogen breath testing. Data were analyzed by linear discriminant analysis effect size with SIBO as the outcome. Any selected genera were tested individually by Wilcoxon’s rank-sum test to ensure that linear discriminant analysis effect size results were not outlier-skewed.ResultsLinear discriminant analysis effect size analysis identified Lactobacillus (linear discriminate analysis score, 4.59; P = .03) as over-represented in 15 out of the 90 children who were SIBO positive.ConclusionsThese results suggest that glucose hydrogen breath test positivity in children from low-income settings may be due to an upper intestinal Lactobacillus bloom, potentially explaining the association of SIBO with the gut damage and inflammation that leads to malnutrition.
Highlights
Glucose hydrogen breath testing is a noninvasive test for small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO)
These results suggest that glucose hydrogen breath test positivity in children from low-income settings may be due to an upper intestinal Lactobacillus bloom, potentially explaining the association of SIBO with the gut damage and inflammation that leads to malnutrition
SIBO in high-income settings has been associated with aberrant absorption of nutrients via several mechanisms, which include bacterial utilization of carbohydrates before host absorption, bile acid deconjugation leading to steatorrhea and loss of fat-soluble vitamins, bacterial B12 utilization, and protein-losing enteropathy [2]
Summary
We performed 16 S V4 rDNA microbiome analysis on the stool of 90 Bangladeshi children aged 2 years from an impoverished neighborhood who were tested at the same time for SIBO by glucose hydrogen breath testing. Any selected genera were tested individually by Wilcoxon’s ranksum test to ensure that linear discriminant analysis effect size results were not outlier-skewed. This work was done on samples from the Performance of Rotavirus and Oral Polio Vaccines in Developing Countries (PROVIDE) study sample bank. PROVIDE is a longitudinal study of Bangladeshi infants with the primary objective of investigating the association between environmental enteric dysfunction (EED) and the underperformance of oral vaccines. All children received the oral polio vaccine per the Expanded Program on Immunization, Bangladesh. The PROVIDE study was approved by the Institutional Review Boards at the University of Virginia and the University of Vermont and by the Ethics and Research Review Committees at the International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
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