Intestinal mycobiota composition and changes in children with thalassemia who underwent allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation
Tarih
2022-01Yazar
Yalçın, Songül
Aksu, Tekin
Kuskonmaz, Baris
Özbek, Namık
Pérez-Brocal, V
Çelik, Melda
Uckan Çetinkaya, Duygu
Moya, A
Dinleyici, EC
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Abstract
Background: Allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) alters the
diversity of the intestinal bacterial microbiota. This study aimed to evaluate human
mycobiota composition pre-HSCT and post-HSCT in children with thalassemia.
Method: Ten children with thalassemia undergoing allogeneic HSCT were enrolled.
The stool samples were collected before the transplantation regimen, before the transplant
day, and +15, +30 days, and three months after transplantation. Stool samples
were also collected from the donor and the patient’s caregivers. Gut mycobiota composition
was evaluated withmetagenomic analysis.
Results: Pretransplantmycobiota of childrenwith thalassemia (the predominant genus
was Saccharomyces, 64.1%) has been shown to approximate the diverse mycobiota
compositions of healthy adult donors but becomes altered (lower diversity) following
transplant procedures. Three months after HSCT, phyla Ascomycota and Basidiomycota
were 83.4% and 15.6%, respectively. The predominant species were Saccaharomyces_
uc and Saccharomyces cerevisiae (phylum Ascomycota); we also observed
Malassezia restricta and Malassezia globosa (phylum Basidiomycota) (∼13%). On day 90
after HSCT, we observed 65.3% M. restricta and 18.4% M. globosa predominance at the
species level in a four-year-old boy with acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) (skin
and gut involvement) 19 days after transplantation included.
Conclusion: The mycobiota composition of children with thalassemia altered after
HSCT. We observed Malassezia predominance in a child with GVHD. Further studies
in children with GVHD will identify this situation.