Microbiome 101: Studying, Analyzing, and Interpreting Gut Microbiome Data for Clinicians.

Published in Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology, 2019

Recommended citation: Allaband, Celeste. (2019). "Microbiome 101: studying, analyzing, and interpreting gut microbiome data for clinicians.." Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology. 17(2), 218-230. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cgh.2018.09.017

In this review, we discuss the content of the human microbiome, including intersubject and intrasubject variability, considerations of study design including important confounding factors, and different methods in the laboratory and on the computer to read the microbiome and its resulting gene products and metabolites. We highlight several common pitfalls for clinicians, including the expectation that an individual’s microbiome will be stable, that diet can induce rapid changes that are large compared with the differences among subjects, that everyone has essentially the same core stool microbiome, and that different laboratory and computational methods will yield essentially the same results. We also highlight the current limitations and future promise of these techniques, with the expectation that an understanding of these considerations will help accelerate the path toward routine clinical application of these techniques developed in research settings.

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Recommended citation: Allaband, Celeste. (2019). “Microbiome 101: studying, analyzing, and interpreting gut microbiome data for clinicians.” Clinical gastroenterology and hepatology. 17(2), 218-230.