Association of corticosteroid inhaler type with saliva microbiome in
moderate-to-severe pediatric asthma
Abstract
Association of corticosteroid inhaler type with saliva
microbiome in moderate-to-severe pediatric asthma Background
Metered dose inhalers (MDIs) and dry powder inhalers (DPIs) are common
inhaled corticosteroid (ICS) inhaler devices. The difference in
formulation and administration technique of these devices may influence
oral cavity microbiota composition. We aimed to compare the saliva
microbiome in children with moderate-to-severe asthma using ICS via MDIs
versus DPIs. Methods Saliva samples collected from 143 children
(6-17 yrs) with moderate-to-severe asthma across four European countries
(the Netherlands, Germany, Spain, and Slovenia) as part of the
SysPharmPediA cohort were subjected to 16S rRNA sequencing. Microbiome
was compared using global diversity (α and β) between two groups of
participants based on inhaler devices (MDI (n=77) and DPI (n=65)) and
differential abundance was compared using the Analysis of Compositions
of Microbiomes with the Bias Correction (ANCOM-BC) method.
Results No significant difference was observed in α-diversity
between the two groups. However, β-diversity analysis revealed
significant differences between groups using both Bray-Curtis and
weighted UniFrac methods (Adjusted p-value=0.015 and 0.044,
respectively). Significant differential abundance between groups, with
higher relative abundance in the MDI group compared to the DPI group,
was detected at the family level [Carnobacteriaceae (Adjusted
p=0.033)] and at the genus level [ Granulicatella (Adjusted
p=0.021) and Aggregatibacter (Adjusted p=0.011)].
Conclusion Types of ICS devices are associated with different
saliva microbiome composition in moderate-to-severe pediatric asthma.
The causal relation between inhaler types and changes in saliva
microbiota composition needs to be further evaluated, as well as whether
this leads to different potential adverse effects in terms of occurrence
and level of severity.