- Raj, Dominic S;
- Sohn, Michael B;
- Charytan, David M;
- Himmelfarb, Jonathan;
- Ikizler, T Alp;
- Mehrotra, Rajnish;
- Ramezani, Ali;
- Regunathan-Shenk, Renu;
- Hsu, Jesse Y;
- Landis, J Richard;
- Li, Hongzhe;
- Kimmel, Paul L;
- Kliger, Alan S;
- Dember, Laura M;
- Hemodialysis Novel Therapies Consortium
Background
The intestinal microbiome is an appealing target for interventions in ESKD because of its likely contribution to uremic toxicity. Before conducting clinical trials of microbiome-altering treatments, it is necessary to understand the within-person and between-person variability in the composition and function of the gut microbiome in patients with ESKD.Methods
We conducted a multicenter, nonrandomized, crossover feasibility study of patients on maintenance hemodialysis consisting of three phases: pretreatment (8 weeks); treatment, during which the prebiotic, p-inulin, was administered at a dosage of 8 g twice daily (12 weeks); and post-treatment (8 weeks). Stool samples were collected 1-2 times per week and blood was collected weekly for 28 weeks. The gut microbiome was characterized using 16S ribosomal-RNA sequencing and metabolomic profiling.Results
A total of 11 of the 13 participants completed the 28-week study. Interparticipant variability was greater than intraparticipant variability for microbiome composition (P<0.001 by UniFrac distances) and metabolomic composition (P<0.001 by Euclidean distances). p-Inulin was well tolerated by 12 of 13 participants. Adherence to the frequent sample collection and self-aliquoting of stool samples were both 96%. A change in the microbiome composition from pretreatment to post-treatment was evident by the overall shifts in weighted UniFrac distances (P=0.004) and a progressive decrease in prevalence of high intraclass correlations, indicating an increase in intraparticipant microbiome diversity during and after p-inulin treatment. An effect of p-inulin on the metabolomic profile was not evident.Conclusions
The intraparticipant stability of the gut microbiome under no-treatment conditions, the tolerability of p-inulin, the signals of increased diversity of the microbiome with p-inulin treatment, and the willingness of participants to provide stool samples all support the feasibility of a larger trial to investigate interventions targeting the gut microbiome in patients with ESKD. Whether or not p-inulin has sufficient efficacy as an intervention requires evaluation in larger studies.Clinical trial registry name and registration number
Gut Microbiome and p-Inulin in Hemodialysis, NCT02572882.