Gut Microbes (Jan 2021)

Gut microbiota of adults with asthma is broadly similar to non-asthmatics in a large population with varied ethnic origins

  • Robert F. J. Kullberg,
  • Bastiaan W. Haak,
  • Mahmoud I. Abdel-Aziz,
  • Mark Davids,
  • Floor Hugenholtz,
  • Max Nieuwdorp,
  • Henrike Galenkamp,
  • Maria Prins,
  • Anke H. Maitland-van der Zee,
  • W. Joost Wiersinga

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2021.1995279
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1

Abstract

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Bacterial gut communities might predispose children to develop asthma. Yet, little is known about the role of these micro-organisms in adult asthmatics. We aimed to profile the relationship between fecal microbiota and asthma in a large-scale, ethnically diverse, observational cohort of adults. Fecal microbiota composition of 1632 adults (172 asthmatics and 1460 non-asthmatics) was analyzed using 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing. Using extremely randomized trees machine learning models, we assessed the discriminatory ability of gut bacterial features to identify asthmatics from non-asthmatics. Asthma contributed 0.019% to interindividual dissimilarities in intestinal microbiota composition, which was not significant (P = .97). Asthmatics could not be distinguished from non-asthmatics based on individual microbiota composition by an extremely randomized trees classifier model (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve = 0.54). In conclusion, there were no prominent differences in fecal microbiota composition in adult asthmatics when compared to non-asthmatics in an urban, large-sized and ethnically diverse cohort.

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