HIV感染者的肠道微生物组、微生物代谢物和心血管疾病。

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q2 INFECTIOUS DISEASES Current HIV/AIDS Reports Pub Date : 2023-04-01 DOI:10.1007/s11904-023-00648-y
Brandilyn A Peters, Robert D Burk, Robert C Kaplan, Qibin Qi
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引用次数: 2

摘要

综述的目的:综合近期有关HIV感染者(PLWH)肠道微生物组和微生物代谢物与心血管疾病(CVD)的证据。最近的发现:一些关于HIV背景下肠道微生物组和心血管结果的横断面研究报道,没有一致的模式出现。此类研究中规模最大的一项发现,肠道梭杆菌与颈动脉斑块有关。更多的研究评估了PLWH中微生物代谢物三甲胺n -氧化物与CVD风险的关系,但结果不一致,最近的前瞻性分析显示无效。对其他微生物代谢物的研究很少。微生物易位生物标志物(如脂多糖结合蛋白)与PLWH中CVD的发生有关。微生物易位可能会增加PLWH患者的心血管疾病风险,但关于特定微生物种类和微生物代谢物与PLWH患者心血管结局相关的证据不足和/或不一致。将肠道微生物组、微生物易位和微生物代谢物与PLWH的心血管结局结合起来,还需要进一步的大型前瞻性研究。
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The Gut Microbiome, Microbial Metabolites, and Cardiovascular Disease in People Living with HIV.

Purpose of review: To synthesize recent evidence relating the gut microbiome and microbial metabolites to cardiovascular disease (CVD) in people living with HIV (PLWH).

Recent findings: A few cross-sectional studies have reported on the gut microbiome and cardiovascular outcomes in the context of HIV, with no consistent patterns emerging. The largest such study found that gut Fusobacterium was associated with carotid artery plaque. More studies have evaluated microbial metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide with CVD risk in PLWH, but results were inconsistent, with recent prospective analyses showing null effects. Studies of other microbial metabolites are scarce. Microbial translocation biomarkers (e.g., lipopolysaccharide binding protein) have been related to incident CVD in PLWH. Microbial translocation may increase CVD risk in PLWH, but there is insufficient and/or inconsistent evidence regarding specific microbial species and microbial metabolites associated with cardiovascular outcomes in PLWH. Further research is needed in large prospective studies integrating the gut microbiome, microbial translocation, and microbial metabolites with cardiovascular outcomes in PLWH.

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来源期刊
Current HIV/AIDS Reports
Current HIV/AIDS Reports INFECTIOUS DISEASES-
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
2.20%
发文量
45
期刊介绍: This journal intends to provide clear, insightful, balanced contributions by international experts that review the most important, recently published clinical findings related to the diagnosis, treatment, management, and prevention of HIV/AIDS. We accomplish this aim by appointing international authorities to serve as Section Editors in key subject areas, such as antiretroviral therapies, behavioral aspects of management, and metabolic complications and comorbidity. Section Editors, in turn, select topics for which leading experts contribute comprehensive review articles that emphasize new developments and recently published papers of major importance, highlighted by annotated reference lists. An international Editorial Board reviews the annual table of contents, suggests articles of special interest to their country/region, and ensures that topics are current and include emerging research. Commentaries from well-known figures in the field are also provided.
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