The relationship between nasopharyngeal, oropharyngeal and sputum microbiota in patients with Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Ellie Kewin, Hollian Richardson, Chandani Hennayake, Daniela Alferes De Lima Headley, Merete Long, James D. Chalmers, Alison Dicker
Abstract
<bold>Introduction:</bold> Disordered lower respiratory tract microbiota composition and diversity correlates with disease severity in COPD patients. Sputum and particularly bronchioalveolar lavage samples can cause discomfort and be resource-intensive to collect. Not all patients are able to expectorate spontaneously. Upper airway swabs could provide an alternative to monitor the microbiota in COPD. <bold>Methods:</bold> 537 sets of sputum samples, nasopharyngeal (NP) and oropharyngeal (OP) swabs were collected from patients with moderate to severe COPD (FEV<sub>1</sub>/FVC ratio <0.7) enrolled from multiple centres across the UK. DNA was extracted and sequenced with 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Reads were analysed using a DADA2 taxonomic inference pipeline and the Silva 138.1 database. Composition and diversity analysis was conducted in R. <bold>Results:</bold> The sputa and OP swabs microbiotas were both dominated by <italic>Streptococcus</italic>. NP swabs showed heterogenous microbiota with <italic>Corynebacterium</italic>, <italic>Staphylococcus</italic> and <italic>Dolosigranulum</italic> being seen in similar proportions. NP swabs had a high proportion of taxa unclassified at the Kingdom level, compared to OP swabs and sputa (Kruskal–Wallis, p<0.01). No difference in evenness (Chao1, p=0.42) and richness (Simpson, p=0.85) was seen between OP swabs and sputa. Differences between NP swabs and sputa were statistically significant (Chao1, p<0.01. Simpson, p<0.01). Microbiota composition abundances positively correlated between sample types from the same patient (Sputa-NP: 0.315 (Spearman's rank), Sputa-OP: 0.728 (Spearman's rank)). <bold>Conclusion:</bold> OP swab composition and diversity are strongly correlated with the sputum microbiota.
MeSH terms
- Pulmonary disease
- Medicine
- Sputum
- Disease
- COPD
- Internal medicine