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Intestinal Microbiota Reduction Followed by Fasting Discloses Microbial Triggering of Inflammation in Rheumatoid Arthritis

Authors :
Michalsen, Thomas Häupl
Till Sörensen
Biljana Smiljanovic
Marine Darcy
Justus Scheder-Bieschin
Nico Steckhan
Anika M. Hartmann
Daniela A. Koppold
Bruno Stuhlmüller
Karl Skriner
Barbara M. Walewska
Berthold Hoppe
Marc Bonin
Gerd R. Burmester
Pascal Schendel
Eugen Feist
Karsten Liere
Martin Meixner
Christian Kessler
Andreas Grützkau
Andreas
Source :
Journal of Clinical Medicine; Volume 12; Issue 13; Pages: 4359
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2023.

Abstract

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) synovitis is dominated by monocytes/macrophages with inflammatory patterns resembling microbial stimulation. In search of triggers, we reduced the intestinal microbiome in 20 RA patients (open label study DRKS00014097) by bowel cleansing and 7-day fasting (≤250 kcal/day) and performed immune monitoring and microbiome sequencing. Patients with metabolic syndrome (n = 10) served as a non-inflammatory control group. Scores of disease activity (DAS28/SDAI) declined within a few days and were improved in 19 of 20 RA patients after breaking the fast (median ∆DAS28 = −1.23; ∆SDAI = −43%) or even achieved remission (DAS28 < 2.6/n = 6; SDAI < 3.3/n = 3). Cytometric profiling with 46 different surface markers revealed the most pronounced phenomenon in RA to be an initially increased monocyte turnover, which improved within a few days after microbiota reduction and fasting. Serum levels of IL-6 and zonulin, an indicator of mucosal barrier disruption, decreased significantly. Endogenous cortisol levels increased during fasting but were insufficient to explain the marked improvement. Sequencing of the intestinal microbiota indicated that fasting reduced potentially arthritogenic bacteria and changed the microbial composition to species with broader metabolic capabilities. More eukaryotic, predominantly fungal colonizers were observed in RA, suggesting possible involvement. This study demonstrates a direct link between the intestinal microbiota and RA-specific inflammation that could be etiologically relevant and would support targeted nutritional interventions against gut dysbiosis as a causal therapeutic approach.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20770383
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Medicine; Volume 12; Issue 13; Pages: 4359
Accession number :
edsair.multidiscipl..fe2f02bfbed794d9c7a73e48c24b25fb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12134359