Immunomodulatory metabolites define long-term gut microbiome recovery after allogeneic HCT and associate with improved survival and reduced relapse related mortality
Schwarz, A.; Eismann, T.; Zheng, T.; Holzinger, S.; Denk, A.; Goeldel, S.; Urban, M.; Goettert, S.; Pourjam, M.; Lagkouvardos, I.; Neuhaus, K.; Herhaus, P.; Verbeek, M.; Gerner, R. R.; Fante, M.; Hiergeist, A.; Gessner, A.; Edinger, M.; Herr, W.; Kleigrewe, K.; Heidegger, S.; Janssen, K.-P.; Holler, E.; Meedt, E.; Schirmer, M.; Bassermann, F.; Wolff, D.; Poeck, H.; Weber, D.; Thiele Orberg, E.
Show abstract
The intestinal microbiome influences immune recovery and long-term outcomes after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (allo-SCT). While reduced bacterial diversity and depletion of immunomodulatory microbial metabolites during peri-engraftment have been linked to acute graft-versus-host disease (aGvHD) and mortality, it remains unclear whether microbiome recovery after engraftment and immune reconstitution is better reflected by bacterial diversity or by microbial metabolic output. We aimed to define microbiome recovery in the late post-transplant period and test whether a metabolite-based biomarker improves the prediction of clinical outcomes, including overall survival (OS) and chronic (c) GvHD. In this two-center longitudinal observational study, serial stool samples were collected from pre-transplant baseline to day +100 after allo-SCT in a discovery cohort (n = 20, Technical University Munich University Hospital (TUM)) and an independent validation cohort (n = 100, University Hospital Regensburg (UKR)). Gut microbiome composition was assessed by 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing, with metagenomic profiling in selected patients, and stool metabolites were quantified using targeted mass spectrometry. Patients were classified as RECOVERY or NO RECOVERY based on changes in bacterial richness between baseline and the post-transplant period. To capture microbial metabolic output, the previously established Immune-Modulatory Metabolite Risk Index (IMM-RI), comprising butyric, propionic, and isovaleric acids, desaminotyrosine and indole-3-carboxaldehyde, was adapted to the late post-transplant period (IMM-RI post-TX). Bacterial alpha diversity frequently improved by day +100; however, this did not consistently indicate restoration of baseline community structure and was not paralleled by recovery of stool metabolite profiles. Accordingly, RECOVERY status showed a limited association with survival or transplant-related mortality (TRM). In contrast, IMM-RI post-TX low-risk identified patients with preserved butyrate-associated biosynthetic capacity and was significantly associated with improved OS in both cohorts (UKR: HR 0.2052, 95% CI 0.07703 - 0.5466, p < 0.0001). In the validation cohort, IMM-RI post-TX low-risk was significantly associated with reduced relapse-related mortality. Interestingly, stool butyric-, propionic and valeric acid concentrations were increased in cGvHD of the skin, indicating context-dependent metabolite effects. These findings suggest that metabolite profiling outperforms bacterial diversity for predicting outcomes after allo-SCT and support microbial metabolites as promising biomarkers for risk stratification and actionable candidates for precision microbiome interventions after allo-SCT.
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