id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-301649-iipyg7ab Lee, John R. Butyrate‐producing gut bacteria and viral infections in kidney transplant recipients: A pilot study 2019-10-08 .txt text/plain 2315 126 47 In a cohort of 360 allogeneic HSCT recipients, they reported that having a >1% relative gut abundance of BPG bacteria is associated with 5-fold less future development of lower respiratory viral infections. We report that having a >1% relative abundance of BPG bacteria is associated with less risk for development of respiratory viral infections in kidney transplant recipients, which provides further support for the findings from the Haak et al study. 11 Among the Paired Abx Group, 6 subjects had anaerobic antibiotic coverage and all 6 had a significant decrease in the relative gut abundance of BPG bacteria from post-transplant week 1 to post-transplant week 4 (median 9.9% vs 1.9%, respectively, P = .03, Wilcoxon signed-rank test; Figure 2E ). Box and whisker plot with the relative gut abundance of BPG bacteria on the yaxis and the fecal specimen post-transplant week on the x-axis for the 6 subjects in the Paired Abx Group who received antibiotics with anaerobic coverage. ./cache/cord-301649-iipyg7ab.txt ./txt/cord-301649-iipyg7ab.txt