Intestinal Energy Harvest Mediates Gut Microbiota-Associated Weight Loss Following Bariatric Surgery.

IF 2.9 3区 医学 Q1 SURGERY Obesity Surgery Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-28 DOI:10.1007/s11695-024-07467-z
Yunzhi Qian, Alicia A Sorgen, Kristine J Steffen, Leslie J Heinberg, Kylie Reed, Ian M Carroll
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Abstract

Purpose: Metabolic and bariatric surgery (MBS) is the most effective treatment for class III obesity. The capacity to efficiently extract intestinal energy is potentially a determinant of varying weight loss outcomes post-MBS. Prior research indicated that intestinal energy harvest is correlated with post-MBS weight loss. Studies have also demonstrated that the gut microbiota is associated with weight loss post-MBS. We aim to investigate whether gut microbiota-associated weight loss is mediated by intestinal energy harvest in patients post-MBS.

Materials and methods: We examined the relationship between specific gut microbiota, intestinal energy harvest, diet, and weight loss using fecal metagenomic sequence data, bomb calorimetry (fecal energy content as a proxy for calorie absorption), and a validated dietary questionnaire on 67 individuals before and after MBS. Mediation analysis and a machine learning algorithm were conducted.

Results: Intestinal energy harvest was a mediator in the relationship between the intestinal microbiota (Bacteroides caccae) and weight loss outcomes in patients post-MBS at 18 months (M). The association between the abundance of B. caccae and post-MBS weight loss rate at 18 M was partly mediated by 1 M intestinal energy harvest (β = 0.001 ± 0.001, P = 0.020). This mediation represents 2.83% of the total effect (β = 0.050 ± 0.047; P = 0.028). Intestinal microbiota and energy harvest improved random forest model's accuracy in predicting weight loss results.

Conclusion: Energy harvest partly mediates the relationship between the intestinal microbiota and weight loss outcomes among patients post-MBS. This study elucidates a potential mechanism regarding how intestinal energy absorption facilitates the effect of intestinal microbiota on energy metabolism and weight loss outcomes.

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减重手术后肠道能量收获介导肠道微生物群相关体重减轻
目的:代谢和减肥手术(MBS)是治疗 III 级肥胖症最有效的方法。有效提取肠道能量的能力可能是代谢与减肥手术后不同减肥效果的决定因素。先前的研究表明,肠道能量的获取与 MBS 后的体重减轻相关。研究还表明,肠道微生物群与 MBS 后的体重减轻有关。我们的目的是研究肠道微生物群相关的体重减轻是否由 MBS 后患者的肠道能量采集所介导:我们使用粪便元基因组序列数据、炸弹热量测定法(粪便能量含量作为卡路里吸收的替代物)和经过验证的饮食调查问卷,研究了特定肠道微生物群、肠道能量采集、饮食和体重减轻之间的关系。研究采用了中介分析和机器学习算法:结果:肠道能量摄入量是影响 MBS 术后 18 个月(M)患者肠道微生物群(卡氏乳杆菌)与体重减轻结果之间关系的中介因素。在 18 个月时,B. caccae 的丰度与 MBS 后体重减轻率之间的关系部分受到 1 M 肠道能量收获的调节(β = 0.001 ± 0.001,P = 0.020)。这种中介作用占总效应的 2.83% (β = 0.050 ± 0.047; P = 0.028)。肠道微生物群和能量收获提高了随机森林模型预测减肥结果的准确性:能量收获在一定程度上介导了肠道微生物群与 MBS 后患者减肥结果之间的关系。这项研究阐明了肠道能量吸收如何促进肠道微生物群对能量代谢和减肥结果影响的潜在机制。
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来源期刊
Obesity Surgery
Obesity Surgery 医学-外科
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
24.10%
发文量
567
审稿时长
3-6 weeks
期刊介绍: Obesity Surgery is the official journal of the International Federation for the Surgery of Obesity and metabolic disorders (IFSO). A journal for bariatric/metabolic surgeons, Obesity Surgery provides an international, interdisciplinary forum for communicating the latest research, surgical and laparoscopic techniques, for treatment of massive obesity and metabolic disorders. Topics covered include original research, clinical reports, current status, guidelines, historical notes, invited commentaries, letters to the editor, medicolegal issues, meeting abstracts, modern surgery/technical innovations, new concepts, reviews, scholarly presentations and opinions. Obesity Surgery benefits surgeons performing obesity/metabolic surgery, general surgeons and surgical residents, endoscopists, anesthetists, support staff, nurses, dietitians, psychiatrists, psychologists, plastic surgeons, internists including endocrinologists and diabetologists, nutritional scientists, and those dealing with eating disorders.
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