76. Hospitalized Patients Have Microbiome Dysbiosis Linked to Post-Discharge Infection
Chad Hinkle, Huaiying Lin, Shanna Banogan, Jackelyn Cantoral, Caroline Jadczak, Ashley Sidebottom, Victoria Burgo, Sabrina Imam, Matthew Odenwald, Emily Landon, Eric Pamer, Christopher Lehmann

TL;DR
Hospitalized patients experience gut microbiome changes that increase their risk of post-discharge infections, including those caused by drug-resistant bacteria.
Contribution
This study links microbiome dysbiosis in hospitalized patients to post-discharge infections, particularly those caused by multidrug-resistant organisms.
Findings
Hospitalized patients had lower microbiome diversity and higher levels of Enterobacterales and Enterococcus compared to healthy donors.
Post-discharge infections were associated with the presence of the same organisms in the discharge microbiome.
Beneficial metabolites like short chain fatty acids and secondary bile acids were reduced in hospitalized patients.
Abstract
A healthy gut microbiome offers protection against pathogenic bacteria, such as multidrug-resistant organisms (MDROs), Enterococcus and Enterobacterales. Expansion of these organisms is a harbinger for invasive infection and could contribute to the spread of MDROs. Acute care hospitals account for the majority of MDRO infections nationally. To test whether hospitalized patients develop pathogenic expansion within the microbiome, we examined the gut microbiome and metabolome of hospitalized patients and compared them to post-discharge infection. In a prospective, observational study we collected stool samples from hospitalized patients on a single unit that approximates a general inpatient population. We performed shotgun metagenomic sequencing and quantitative GC and LC-MS metabolite measurement on each sample. We examined the differences in microbiota diversity and composition to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Clostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Antibiotic Resistance in Bacteria
