Bryan Coburn, MD, PhD, FRCPC

I am a Clinician-Scientist in Infectious Diseases (ID) at the University Health Network in Toronto, where I attend on the inpatient General ID consult service (at Toronto General, Toronto Western, and Mount Sinai Hospitals) and have outpatient practices in post-discharge General ID follow-up, HIV treatment and prevention, and Tuberculosis (at the TWH TB clinic). I lead an Infectious Diseases Clinical Research Unit at the UHN that undertakes human clinical trials in infectious diseases, antimicrobial stewardship, and microbiome-targeting therapies.

My lab studies human microbiomes in health and disease, including human clinical trials of microbiome-targeting therapies in infectious and non-infectious diseases. We are specifically interested in the effects of various treatments (particularly antibiotics) on the composition of the gut microbiome and microbiomes of other mucosal surfaces. Our goal is to translate our understanding of the complexity and function of the human microbiome to diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of human diseases in which microbiome perturbation has been implicated, including sexual/reproductive health, cancer, critical illness, and the treatment and prevention of bacterial infections.

BALANCE of the Microbiome

Study Status: Active
Study Purpose: We are comparing how well 7 days versus 14 days of antibiotic treatment work for people with bloodstream infections. We want to know if longer treatment has more harmful effects on healthy (good) bacteria in people being treated.
Background: Bloodstream infections are when bacteria are in the blood, and this is treated with antibiotics. Doctors aren't sure how long to give antibiotics, so we're trying to find out if treating for fewer days (7 days) works just as well as treating for more days (14 days). Long antibiotic treatments can harm good bacteria in the gut and make bacteria resistant to antibiotics. We are going to compare the bacteria in the stool of people who got 7 or 14 days of antibiotics. If treating for fewer days is just as effective, it could help protect the good bacteria in the gut.
Study Methods: We're doing this study as part of a larger one called BALANCE. In the main BALANCE study, patients across Canada were given antibiotics for either 7 or 14 days. In our study, we collected samples from 175 patients at different times during treatment. We're going to check these samples to see what bacteria are there, if any are resistant to antibiotics, and how the two groups (7 days and 14 days of antibiotics) compare.
Health Conditions: Blood disorders

 

For a list of Dr. Coburn's publications, please visit PubMed or Scopus.


Assistant Professor, Department of Laboratory Medicine & Pathobiology, University of Toronto
Associate Professor, Department of Medicine, University of Toronto