患有情绪、焦虑和神经发育障碍儿童的肠道微生物群:综述

Kaitlin Romano, Ashka N Shah, Anett Schumacher, Clare Zasowski, Tianyi Zhang, Glyneva Bradley-Ridout, Kaitlyn Merriman, John Parkinson, Peter Szatmari, Susan C Campisi, Daphne J Korczak
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童和青少年肠道微生物群与心理健康的研究越来越多。这一总括性综述提供了当前证据综合的高水平概述,以合并当前的研究并告知未来的方向。在7个数据库中检索了同行评议的儿科(18年)综述文献。研究报告了肠道微生物组组成和/或生物补充剂对抑郁症、双相情感障碍、焦虑、注意缺陷多动障碍、自闭症谱系障碍(ASD)或强迫症(OCD)的影响。在疫情期间进行了重复数据删除和筛选。进行敏感性分析以评估主要研究重叠的程度。在纳入的39项综述研究中,23项(59%)为观察性研究,16项(41%)为干预性研究。大多数评论(92%)集中在ASD上。超过一半(56%)的观察性和干预性评价在方法学质量上得分较低或极低。在ASD研究中一致观察到较高丰度的梭菌群和较低丰度的双歧杆菌。生物补充剂与ASD症状改善相关。儿童和青少年抑郁症、焦虑症、双相情感障碍和强迫症的肠道微生物群-心理健康综合证据缺乏。初步证据表明,特定微生物群与ASD症状之间存在关联,一些证据支持益生菌补充ASD治疗的作用。
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The gut microbiome in children with mood, anxiety, and neurodevelopmental disorders: An umbrella review
Abstract Research on the gut microbiome and mental health among children and adolescents is growing. This umbrella review provides a high-level overview of current evidence syntheses to amalgamate current research and inform future directions. Searches were conducted across seven databases for peer-reviewed pediatric (<18 years) review literature. Studies reporting gut microbiome composition and/or biotic supplementation on depression, bipolar disorder, anxiety, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), or obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) were included. Deduplication and screening took place in Covidence. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to assess the degree of primary study overlap. Among the 39 included review studies, 23 (59%) were observational and 16 (41%) were interventional. Most reviews (92%) focused on ASD. Over half (56%) of the observational and interventional reviews scored low or critically low for methodological quality. A higher abundance of Clostridium clusters and a lower abundance of Bifidobacterium were consistently observed in ASD studies. Biotic supplementation was associated with ASD symptom improvement. Gut microbiome-mental health evidence syntheses in child and youth depression, anxiety, bipolar disorder, and OCD are lacking. Preliminary evidence suggests an association between specific microbiota and ASD symptoms, with some evidence supporting a role for probiotic supplementation ASD therapy.
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