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Salivary microbiota reflects changes in gut microbiota in cirrhosis with hepatic encephalopathy
Jasmohan S. Bajaj, Naga S. Betrapally, Phillip B. Hylemon, Douglas M. Heuman, Kalyani Daita, Melanie B. White, Ariel Unser, Leroy R. Thacker, Arun J. Sanyal, Dae Joong Kang, Masoumeh Sikaroodi, Patrick M. Gillevet
Hepatology · 2015 · ▲ 325 citations
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Altered gut microbiome is associated with systemic inflammation and cirrhosis decompensation. However, the correlation of the oral microbiome with inflammation in cirrhosis is unclear. Our aim was to evaluate the oral microbiome in cirrhosis and compare with stool microbiome. Outpatients with cirrhosis (with/without hepatic encephalopathy [HE]) and controls underwent stool/saliva microbiome analysis (for composition and function) and also systemic inflammatory evaluation. Ninety-day liver-related hospitalizations were recorded. Salivary inflammation was studied using T helper 1 cytokines/secretory immunoglobulin A (IgA), histatins and lysozyme in a subsequent group. A total of 102 patients with cirrhosis (43 previous HE) and 32 age-matched controls were included. On principal component analysis (PCA), stool and saliva microbiome clustered far apart, showing differences between sites as a whole. In salivary microbiome, with previous HE, relative abundance of autochthonous families decreased whereas potentially pathogenic ones (Enterobacteriaceae, Enterococcaceae) increased in saliva. Endotoxin-related predicted functions were significantly higher in cirrhotic saliva. In stool microbiome, relative autochthonous taxa abundance reduced in previous HE, along with increased Enterobacteriaceae and Enterococcaceae. Cirrhotic stool microbiota demonstrated a significantly higher correlation with systemic inflammation, compared to saliva microbiota, on correlation networks. Thirty-eight patients were hospitalized within 90 days. Their salivary dysbiosis was significantly worse and predicted this outcome independent of cirrhosis severity. Salivary inflammation was studied in an additional 86 age-matched subjects (43 controls/43 patients with cirrhosis); significantly higher interleukin (IL)-6/IL-1β, secretory IgA, and lower lysozyme, and histatins 1 and 5 were found in patients with cirrhosis, compared to controls. CONCLUSIONS: Dysbiosis, represented by reduction in autochthonous bacteria, is present in both saliva and stool in patients with cirrhosis, compared to controls. Patients with cirrhosis have impaired salivary defenses and worse inflammation. Salivary dysbiosis was greater in patients with cirrhosis who developed 90-day hospitalizations. These findings could represent a global mucosal-immune interface change in cirrhosis.
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- 10.1002/hep.27819
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- 2026-06-13 MST
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APA
Bajaj, J.S., Betrapally, N.S., Hylemon, P.B., Heuman, D.M., Daita, K., White, M.B., Unser, A., Thacker, L.R., Sanyal, A.J., Kang, D.J., Sikaroodi, M., & Gillevet, P.M. (2015). Salivary microbiota reflects changes in gut microbiota in cirrhosis with hepatic encephalopathy. <em>Hepatology</em>. https://doi.org/10.1002/hep.27819
Vancouver
Bajaj JS, Betrapally NS, Hylemon PB, Heuman DM, Daita K, White MB, et al. Salivary microbiota reflects changes in gut microbiota in cirrhosis with hepatic encephalopathy. Hepatology. 2015. doi:10.1002/hep.27819.
BibTeX
@article{jasmohan2015Saliva,
title = {Salivary microbiota reflects changes in gut microbiota in cirrhosis with hepatic encephalopathy},
author = {Jasmohan S. Bajaj and Naga S. Betrapally and Phillip B. Hylemon and Douglas M. Heuman and Kalyani Daita and Melanie B. White and Ariel Unser and Leroy R. Thacker and Arun J. Sanyal and Dae Joong Kang and Masoumeh Sikaroodi and Patrick M. Gillevet},
journal = {Hepatology},
year = {2015},
doi = {10.1002/hep.27819},
}
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