Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

No evidence for a common blood microbiome based on a population study of 9,770 healthy humans

Cedric Tan, Karrie Kwan Ki Ko, Hui Chen, Jianjun Liu, Marie Loh, Minghao Chia, Niranjan Nagarajan

Nature Microbiology · 2023

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Summary

Human blood is conventionally considered sterile but recent studies suggest the presence of a blood microbiome in healthy individuals. Here we characterized the DNA signatures of microbes in the blood of 9,770 healthy individuals using sequencing data from multiple cohorts. After filtering for contaminants, we identified 117 microbial species in blood, some of which had DNA signatures of microbial replication. They were primarily commensals associated with the gut (n = 40), mouth (n = 32) and genitourinary tract (n = 18), and were distinct from pathogens detected in hospital blood cultures. No species were detected in 84% of individuals, while the remainder only had a median of one species. Less than 5% of individuals shared the same species, no co-occurrence patterns between different spe

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s41564-023-01350-w
Catalogue ID
SNmojqlwj8-m2lo6x
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