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The mighty human microbiome: a key to solving the problem of | 57153

Journal de microbiologie et d'immunologie

Abstrait

The mighty human microbiome: a key to solving the problem of AMR in primary care?

Esther van der Werf

The human microbiome is overly exposed to antibiotics, due, not only to their medical use, but also to their utilization in farms. In the last decade interest in the effect of antibiotic therapy on the host microbiota has increased, and new technologies are beginning to uncover the complexity and importance of balanced host-microbiota interactions. Microbiome composition can be rapidly altered by exposure to antibiotics, with potential immediate effect on the health (acute diseases). For example a recent study of Ildiko et al. [1] showed that patients with UTI given an antibiotic were more likely to experience a subsequent UTI in the following weeks. However, antibiotics- induced changes of the gut microbiome can also indirectly affect health in long term (e.g. allergies/atopy/asthma) [2]. Once antibiotic treatment has stopped, the microbiome may present a certain degree of resilience, being capable of returning to a composition similar to the original one, but the initial state is often not totally recovered. In fact, antibiotic-induced microbiota alterations can remain after a long periods of time, spanning months and even years. The question is whether GPs and patients take the biologic costs of antibiotic use into account sufficiently in making treatment decisions. Differences in perceptions about how risk-free antibiotic treatment is might in part account for the variation in rates of their use among GPs worldwideEvidence of alternative treatment strategies that could relieve symptoms and reduce antibiotic consumption is needed. In patients who needed to be treated with antibiotics microbiome modulation to restore the human microbiome post antibiotic use might be a powerful strategy to improve resilience and health. Microbiota prevention- and intervention strategies, including complementary and alternative medicine (CAM), faecal transplant, prebiotics, probiotics and nutrition, might be effective strategies to conserve and steward the effects of antibiotics.

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