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Metformin was associated with a greater abundance of mucin-degrading Akkermansia muciniphila in the gut, researchers in Colombia found.
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The drug was also associated with an increase in several other microbiota.
“Recent studies in animals and humans provide evidence that metformin may partially restore gut dysbiosis associated with type 2 diabetes,” Jacobo de la Cuesta-Zuluaga, of Grupo Empresarial Nutresa, Medellin, Colombia, and colleagues wrote. “In mice fed a high-fat diet, metformin treatment increased the relative abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila, a mucin-degrading bacterium that has been shown to reverse metabolic disorders. In humans, participants with diabetes taking metformin had similar abundance of Subdoligranulum and, to some extent, Akkermansia compared with control subjects without diabetes, suggesting that metformin may help ameliorate a type 2 diabetes-associated gut microbiome.”
Researchers matched 28 Colombian adults with type 2 diabetes, 14 of whom were taking metformin, with 84 participants without diabetes. Cuesta-Zuluaga and colleagues recorded anthropometry, demographic information and blood biochemical data in addition to collecting fecal samples to analyze the participants’ gut microbiota.
When researchers pooled mucin-degrading and butyrate-producing microbes, they reported that patients with diabetes who took metformin had 3.4 times more A. muciniphila (F1, 109 = 9.46; P = .003) and 4.4 times more Butyrivibrio (F1, 109 = 3.03; P = .08)than patients with diabetes who did not take metformin. The metformin group also had higher levels of Bifidobacterium bifidum, Megasphera and an operational taxonomic unit of Prevotella. The same was true for the metformin group when compared with the nondiabetic group, Cuesta-Zuluaga and colleagues wrote.
“In our community-based sample of Colombian adults, we provide evidence consistent with previous literature that the association between gut microbiota and type 2 diabetes is modified by metformin use,” the researchers wrote. “Type 2 diabetes metformin participants had higher relative abundance of purportedly beneficial mucin-degrading and SCFA-producing bacteria compared with type 2 diabetes metformin-negative and nondiabetic participants matched on age, sex and BMI. Our study… provides evidence congruent with the hypothesis that metformin has direct effects on gut microbiota composition through augmentation of mucin-degrading A. muciniphila as well as several SCFA-producing bacteria. Randomized controlled trials are needed to determine whether the anti-diabetes and anti-inflammatory effects of metformin are mediated by the changes to gut microbiota composition.” – by Andy Polhamus
Disclosure: Cuesta-Zuluaga reports being an employee of Grupo Empresarial Nutresa. Please see the full study for a complete list of all other authors’ relevant financial disclosures.
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