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Gut Microbiota Exceeds Cervical Microbiota for Early Diagnosis of Endometriosis.

Authors :
Huang, Liujing
Liu, Bingdong
Liu, Zhihong
Feng, Wanqin
Liu, Minjuan
Wang, Yifeng
Peng, Dongxian
Fu, Xiafei
Zhu, Honglei
Cui, Zongbin
Xie, Liwei
Ma, Ying
Source :
Frontiers in Cellular & Infection Microbiology; 12/7/2021, Vol. 11, p1-15, 15p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The diagnosis of endometriosis is typically delayed by years for the unexclusive symptom and the traumatic diagnostic method. Several studies have demonstrated that gut microbiota and cervical mucus potentially can be used as auxiliary diagnostic biomarkers. However, none of the previous studies has compared the robustness of endometriosis classifiers based on microbiota of different body sites or demonstrated the correlation among microbiota of gut, cervical mucus, and peritoneal fluid of endometriosis, searching for alternative diagnostic approaches. Herein, we enrolled 41 women (control, n = 20; endometriosis, n = 21) and collected 122 well-matched samples, derived from feces, cervical mucus, and peritoneal fluid, to explore the nature of microbiome of endometriosis patients. Our results indicated that microbial composition is remarkably distinguished between three body sites, with 19 overlapped taxa. Moreover, endometriosis patients harbor distinct microbial communities versus control group especially in feces and peritoneal fluid, with increased abundance of pathogens in peritoneal fluid and depletion of protective microbes in feces. Particularly, genera of Ruminococcus and Pseudomonas were identified as potential biomarkers in gut and peritoneal fluid, respectively. Furthermore, novel endometriosis classifiers were constructed based on taxa selected by a robust machine learning method. These results demonstrated that gut microbiota exceeds cervical microbiota in diagnosing endometriosis. Collectively, this study reveals important insights into the microbial profiling in different body sites of endometriosis, which warrant future exploration into the role of microbiota in endometriosis and highlighted values on gut microbiota in early diagnosis of endometriosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22352988
Volume :
11
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Frontiers in Cellular & Infection Microbiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
154009077
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcimb.2021.788836