Correlation between gut microbiota characteristics and non-small cell lung cancer based on macrogenomics sequencing.

Hereditas

Department of Oncology, The Second Clinical Medical College, Affiliated Fifth People's Hospital of Chengdu, Cancer Prevention and Treatment Institute of Chengdu, Chengdu Fifth People's Hospital, University of Traditional Chinese Medicine), No.33, Mashi Street, Wenjiang District, Chengdu City, Sichua

Published: August 2024


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Article Abstract

Objective: Non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patients undergoing chemotherapy and immunotherapy experience disturbances in the gut microbiota. This study intends to find out the correlation between gut microbiota and clinical indices before and after radiotherapy for NSCLC.

Methods: Ten patients with primary NSCLC were screened, and plasma and fecal samples were collected before and after radiotherapy, respectively. Inflammatory indices in plasma were detected. Genomic DNA was extracted from fecal specimens and sequenced on on Illumina HiSeq2000 sequencing platform. Thee sequenced data were subjected to Metagenome assembly, gene prediction, species annotation, and gene function analysis to study and analyze gut microbiota and metabolic functions. The correlation between the diversity of gut microbiota and the clinical indicators of NSCLC patients was evaluated, and the changes of gut microbiota before and after radiotherapy were observed.

Results: The diversity of gut microbiota in NSCLC patients did not correlate with smoking, pathology, and inflammatory markers. The abundance of phylum (p)_Bacteroidetes increased; p_Firmicutes and p_Bacteroidetes accounted for the highest proportion in NSCLC patients, and the abundance of both was dominantly exchanged after radiotherapy. There was a decrease in genus (g)_Bifidobacterium after radiotherapy in NSCLC patients. There was no significant correlation between the diversity of gut microbiota after radiotherapy and radiotherapy sensitivity, and the structural composition and abundance of gut microbiota remained stable.

Conclusion: The diversity of gut microbiota is altered after radiotherapy in NSCLC patients, showing an increase in harmful bacteria and a decrease in beneficial bacteria.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11348753PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41065-024-00328-wDOI Listing

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