TY - JOUR T1 - Stool consistency as a major confounding factor affecting microbiota composition: an ignored variable? JF - Gut JO - Gut SP - 1 LP - 2 DO - 10.1136/gutjnl-2015-310043 VL - 65 IS - 1 AU - Jack A Gilbert AU - John Alverdy Y1 - 2016/01/01 UR - http://gut.bmj.com/content/65/1/1.abstract N2 - In this age of the microbiome, the one request most oft heard is ‘so what is the biomarker for this disease?’ In a world of ‘one-size-fits-all’ solutions, and a one pathogen-one disease framework of investigation, most doctors, clinical healthcare professionals, and healthcare industrialists just want the punchline—what is the bacterium that is causing that disease? The problem with this approach is that it remains a challenge to fully understand whether a given microbiome has any causative influence on a given condition, or whether identified associations have any relevance outside of a given case study. Unlike monomicrobial diseases where Koch's postulates can be applied, the interaction between the microbial ecology of the body, and health and disease is extremely complex, leading to fuzzy concepts of organismal ratios and phylogenetic groups of organisms being associated with a specific condition. In their recent paper, Vandeputte et al1 seek to determine whether gut-transit time has an influence on microbial community profiles in stool, and by what mechanism this occurs, as well as considering whether this influence could have an impact on clinical studies.Clinicians and microbiome researchers continue to struggle with the delicate balance that exists between elucidating the pathogenesis of a disease and defining the role of a particular organism, or group of organisms in this process. This can be a slippery slope; on the one hand, we want a microbiome-based diagnosis and a discriminative biomarker. … ER -