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Associations of disordered eating with the intestinal microbiota and short-chain fatty acids among young adults with type 1 diabetes.


ABSTRACT:

Background and aims

Disordered eating (DE) in type 1 diabetes (T1D) includes insulin restriction for weight loss with serious complications. Gut microbiota-derived short chain fatty acids (SCFA) may benefit host metabolism but are reduced in T1D. We evaluated the hypothesis that DE and insulin restriction were associated with reduced SCFA-producing gut microbes, SCFA, and intestinal microbial diversity in adults with T1D.

Methods and results

We collected stool samples at four timepoints in a hypothesis-generating gut microbiome pilot study ancillary to a weight management pilot in young adults with T1D. 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing measured the normalized abundance of SCFA-producing intestinal microbes. Gas-chromatography mass-spectrometry measured SCFA (total, acetate, butyrate, and propionate). The Diabetes Eating Problem Survey-Revised (DEPS-R) assessed DE and insulin restriction. Covariate-adjusted and Bonferroni-corrected generalized estimating equations modeled the associations. COVID-19 interrupted data collection, so models were repeated restricted to pre-COVID-19 data. Data were available for 45 participants at 109 visits, which included 42 participants at 65 visits pre-COVID-19. Participants reported restricting insulin "At least sometimes" at 53.3% of visits. Pre-COVID-19, each 5-point DEPS-R increase was associated with a -0.34 (95% CI -0.56, -0.13, p = 0.07) lower normalized abundance of genus Anaerostipes; and the normalized abundance of Lachnospira genus was -0.94 (95% CI -1.5, -0.42), p = 0.02 lower when insulin restriction was reported "At least sometimes" compared to "Rarely or Never".

Conclusion

DE and insulin restriction were associated with a reduced abundance of SCFA-producing gut microbes pre-COVID-19. Additional studies are needed to confirm these associations to inform microbiota-based therapies in T1D.

SUBMITTER: Igudesman D 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC9925402 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Associations of disordered eating with the intestinal microbiota and short-chain fatty acids among young adults with type 1 diabetes.

Igudesman Daria D   Crandell Jamie J   Corbin Karen D KD   Zaharieva Dessi P DP   Addala Ananta A   Thomas Joan M JM   Bulik Cynthia M CM   Pence Brian W BW   Pratley Richard E RE   Kosorok Michael R MR   Maahs David M DM   Carroll Ian M IM   Mayer-Davis Elizabeth J EJ  

Nutrition, metabolism, and cardiovascular diseases : NMCD 20221117 2


<h4>Background and aims</h4>Disordered eating (DE) in type 1 diabetes (T1D) includes insulin restriction for weight loss with serious complications. Gut microbiota-derived short chain fatty acids (SCFA) may benefit host metabolism but are reduced in T1D. We evaluated the hypothesis that DE and insulin restriction were associated with reduced SCFA-producing gut microbes, SCFA, and intestinal microbial diversity in adults with T1D.<h4>Methods and results</h4>We collected stool samples at four time  ...[more]

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2021-09-29 | GSE184431 | GEO