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Narrative review explores microbiome-targeting therapies for inflammatory bowel disease patients

Narrative review explores microbiome-targeting therapies for inflammatory bowel disease patients
Photo by National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases / Unsplash
Key Takeaway
Consider microbiome-targeting therapies as emerging options for inflammatory bowel disease management.

This narrative review focuses on the emerging field of targeting the microbial-metabolic axis for the treatment of inflammatory bowel disease. The scope of the article encompasses a range of novel therapeutic strategies, including fecal microbiota transplantation, probiotic therapy, bacteriophage therapy, helminth-based therapies, microbiome engineering, and precision genome editing. The authors aim to provide a qualitative overview of these interventions within the context of standard care options like aminosalicylates, biologics, and immunomodulators.

The review does not report specific sample sizes, primary outcomes, or follow-up durations for the interventions discussed. Consequently, the authors do not provide pooled effect sizes or quantitative safety data regarding adverse events or tolerability. The text serves to outline the conceptual landscape of these therapies rather than to present definitive clinical trial results.

Limitations acknowledged by the authors include the lack of reported data on serious adverse events and discontinuations. The review notes that certainty regarding the clinical utility of these microbiome-targeting approaches remains uncertain. Practice relevance is not explicitly defined in the source material, suggesting that these therapies are still in an investigational or early development phase.

Study Details

Study typeSystematic review
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic relapsing inflammatory condition that has a rapidly changing global epidemiology. IBD has been traditionally viewed as a primary immune system dysfunction, but emerging evidence more accurately describes IBD as a perturbance of the intricate balance between host immunity, the intestinal microbiome, and intestinal metabolism. Although genetic and environmental components have long been recognized as contributors, accumulating evidence increasingly highlights the pivotal role of microbial dysbiosis in the pathogenesis of IBD. In patients with IBD, intestinal dysbiosis, which is often characterized by reduced Firmicutes and increased pro-inflammatory bacteria, triggers a cascade of pathogenic events. These pathogenic events include impaired epithelial barrier function, dysregulated immune activation against luminal antigens, and immune reprogramming. Central to these processes are functional changes in microbial metabolism, particularly in pathways involving short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs), bile acids, and redox homeostasis, which critically contribute to the development of chronic mucosal inflammation. The current therapeutic backbone of IBD—including aminosalicylates, biologics, and immunomodulators—largely targets the inflammatory response. However, the challenges such as primary non-response, secondary loss of response, and systemic side effects are often problematic. Consequently, there is an urgent need to develop novel therapeutic and preventive strategies that target the underlying microbial and metabolic causes of the disease rather than modulating immune responses. This review integrates the pathomechanistic implications of the microbiome-metabolic axis in the maintenance of gut homeostasis and its disruption in IBD, with particular emphasis on the global epidemiology of the disease. We further evaluate emerging therapeutic and preventive strategies aimed at restoring the microbiome-metabolic axis, including fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT), probiotic therapy, bacteriophage therapy, and helminth-based therapies. In addition, we explore the potential of advanced approaches such as microbiome engineering and precision genome editing to enable highly personalized therapeutic paradigms. By bridging microbial ecology with clinical pathology, this review highlights the transformative potential of targeting the host-microbiota interface to achieve improved long-term outcomes in IBD.
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