“This project will develop prebiotic and probiotic therapies that are personalized for each patient in order to reduce comorbid illness, particularly illness related to harmful alcohol use, in people living with HIV,” notes Dr. David Welsh, the study’s principal investigator.
Communities of bacteria, or microbiota, that live in the gastrointestinal tract are increasingly recognized as a focal point in the regulation of metabolic disorders and related conditions, such as cardiovascular disease. Both alcohol use and HIV infection disturb the gut microbiota and increase their ability to breach the gut barrier and leak into tissues, triggering immune activation and inflammation.
“Therapeutic interventions targeting the microbiota offer great potential to attenuate the metabolic health issues prevalent in alcohol-using people living with HIV,” says Welsh. “The data generated by this project will provide guidance for the design of clinical trials to be conducted in the second component of the grant.”