TY - JOUR
T1 - Baseline gut microbiome alpha diversity predicts chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms in patients with breast cancer
AU - Otto-Dobos, Lauren D.
AU - Strehle, Lindsay D.
AU - Loman, Brett R.
AU - Seng, Melina M.
AU - Sardesai, Sagar D.
AU - Williams, Nicole O.
AU - Gatti-Mays, Margaret E.
AU - Stover, Daniel G.
AU - Sudheendra, Preeti K.
AU - Wesolowski, Robert
AU - Andridge, Rebecca R.
AU - Bailey, Michael T.
AU - Pyter, Leah M.
N1 - This study was supported in part by NIH grant R01 CA216290 and The Ohio State University Wexner Medical Center. The authors thank the Intelligut Study participants, Drs. Cathie Atkinson, Martha Belury, Jeffrey Galley, Tamar Gur, Chris Lauber, Audrey Duff, Bhuvaneswari Ramaswamy, Matthew Cherian, Jeffrey Vandeusen, Ashley Pariser, and Amiya Ghosh, as well as, Michael DiGregorio, Bryon Laskowski, Jennifer Hollyfield, Heather Bline, Yonaida Valentine, Leslie Simon, Pritika Sharma, and Dakota Dustin for technical advice and assistance.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Chemotherapy frequently causes debilitating gastrointestinal symptoms, which are inadequately managed by current treatments. Recent research indicates the gut microbiome plays a role in the pathogenesis of these symptoms. The current study aimed to identify pre-chemotherapy microbiome markers that predict gastrointestinal symptom severity after breast cancer chemotherapy. Fecal samples, blood, and gastrointestinal symptom scores were collected from 59 breast cancer patients before, during, and after chemotherapy. Lower pre-chemotherapy microbiome alpha diversity and abundance of specific microbes (e.g., Faecalibacterium) predicted greater chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms. Notably, tumor and diet characteristics were associated with lower pre-chemotherapy alpha diversity. Lower baseline alpha diversity also predicted higher chemotherapy-induced microbiome disruption, which was positively associated with diarrhea symptoms. The results indicate certain cancer patients have lower microbiome diversity before chemotherapy, which is predictive of greater chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms and a less resilient microbiome. These patients may be strong candidates for pre-chemotherapy microbiome-directed preventative interventions (e.g., diet change).
AB - Chemotherapy frequently causes debilitating gastrointestinal symptoms, which are inadequately managed by current treatments. Recent research indicates the gut microbiome plays a role in the pathogenesis of these symptoms. The current study aimed to identify pre-chemotherapy microbiome markers that predict gastrointestinal symptom severity after breast cancer chemotherapy. Fecal samples, blood, and gastrointestinal symptom scores were collected from 59 breast cancer patients before, during, and after chemotherapy. Lower pre-chemotherapy microbiome alpha diversity and abundance of specific microbes (e.g., Faecalibacterium) predicted greater chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms. Notably, tumor and diet characteristics were associated with lower pre-chemotherapy alpha diversity. Lower baseline alpha diversity also predicted higher chemotherapy-induced microbiome disruption, which was positively associated with diarrhea symptoms. The results indicate certain cancer patients have lower microbiome diversity before chemotherapy, which is predictive of greater chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal symptoms and a less resilient microbiome. These patients may be strong candidates for pre-chemotherapy microbiome-directed preventative interventions (e.g., diet change).
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U2 - 10.1038/s41523-024-00707-6
DO - 10.1038/s41523-024-00707-6
M3 - Article
C2 - 39548124
AN - SCOPUS:85209352347
SN - 2374-4677
VL - 10
JO - npj Breast Cancer
JF - npj Breast Cancer
IS - 1
M1 - 99
ER -