| Literature DB >> 30609850 |
Silvia Vivarelli1, Rossella Salemi2, Saverio Candido3, Luca Falzone4, Maria Santagati5, Stefania Stefani6, Francesco Torino7, Giuseppe Luigi Banna8, Giuseppe Tonini9, Massimo Libra10,11.
Abstract
Cancer is a multifactorial pathology and it represents the second leading cause of death worldwide. In the recent years, numerous studies highlighted the dual role of the gut microbiota in preserving host's health. Gut resident bacteria are able to produce a number of metabolites and bioproducts necessary to protect host's and gut's homeostasis. Conversely, several microbiota subpopulations may expand during pathological dysbiosis and therefore produce high levels of toxins capable, in turn, to trigger both inflammation and tumorigenesis. Importantly, gut microbiota can interact with the host either modulating directly the gut epithelium or the immune system. Numerous gut populating bacteria, called probiotics, have been identified as protective against the genesis of tumors. Given their capability of preserving gut homeostasis, probiotics are currently tested to help to fight dysbiosis in cancer patients subjected to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Most recently, three independent studies show that specific gut resident species may potentiate the positive outcome of anti-cancer immunotherapy. The highly significant studies, uncovering the tight association between gut microbiota and tumorigenesis, as well as gut microbiota and anti-cancer therapy, are here described. The role of the Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG (LGG), as the most studied probiotic model in cancer, is also reported. Overall, according to the findings here summarized, novel strategies integrating probiotics, such as LGG, with conventional anti-cancer therapies are strongly encouraged.Entities:
Keywords: Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG; anti-cancer therapy; cancer; inflammasomes; integrated therapy; microbiome; microbiota; probiotics
Year: 2019 PMID: 30609850 PMCID: PMC6356461 DOI: 10.3390/cancers11010038
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Anti-tumoral effects of the gut microbiota. Probiotics and other gut resident bacteria are able to secrete molecules, capable, in turn, to fight tumor growth and prevent tumorigenesis through several mechanisms. Schematic of the intestinal layers, from top to bottom: mucus and microbiota, gut epithelium. Into the grey boxes are illustrated, from top to bottom, the microorganism species implicated in the anti-cancer process, the molecules produced and the corresponding effects induced within the host. Abbreviations: MPL, monophosphoryl lipid A; LPS, lipopolysaccharide.
Figure 2Pro-tumoral effects of the gut microbiota. Bacteria prominent during gut dysbiosis can secrete toxins able to interfere with host cell growth, finally predisposing the host organism to cancer development. Schematic of the intestinal layers, from top to bottom: mucus and microbiota, gut epithelium. Into the grey boxes are illustrated, from top to bottom, the microorganism species implicated in the pro-cancer process, the molecules produced and the corresponding effects induced within the host. Abbreviations: ROS, Reactive Oxygen Species; CTD, cytolethal distending toxin; IpgD, inositol phosphate phosphatase D; VirA, virulence gene A; CagA, cytotoxin associated gene A; FadA, Fusobacterium effector adhesin A; MP Toxin, metalloproteinase toxin; AvrA, avirulence protein A; β-gluc, β-glucuronidase.
Clinical trials * describing the efficacy of probiotics dietary supplementation and/or FMT in cancer patients.
| Status | Title | Intervention | Disease | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT00936572 | C | Probiotics in CRC patients | DS: probiotic | CRC | [ |
| NCT01839721 | C | Impact of probiotics on diarrhea in patients treated with pelvic radiation | DS: probiotic | Various Cancers | [ |
| NCT01410955 | C | Prevention of irinotecan-induced diarrhea by probiotics | DS: probiotic | CRC | [ |
| NCT01479907 | C | Synbiotics and GI function-related quality of life after colectomy for cancer | DS: prebiotics and probiotics | CRC | [ |
| NCT01609660 | C | Impact of probiotics on the intestinal microbiota | DS: | CRC | [ |
| NCT03072641 | C | Using probiotics to reactivate tumor-suppressor genes in CRC | DS: probiotic | CC | [ |
| NCT01468779 | C | Effect of probiotics in patients undergoing surgery for periampullary neoplasms | DS: probiotics | PC | [ |
| NCT01895530 | C | Impact of probiotics in modulation of intestinal microbiota | DS: | CRC | - |
| NCT03420443 | C | Action of synbiotics on irradiated GI mucosa in RC treatment (FIPIREX) | DS: probiotics | RC | - |
| NCT02771470 | C | Intestinal microbiota in lung cancer after chemotherapy | DS: probiotics | LC | - |
| NCT02021253 | C | Influence of probiotics administration before liver resection in liver disease (LIPROCES) | DS: probiotics | HCC | - |
| NCT02751736 | O | The effect of probiotics on bowel function restoration after ileostomy closure in patients with RC | DS: probiotic | RC | - |
| NCT03290651 | O | Probiotics and breast health | DS: probiotic | BC | - |
| NCT03518268 | O | DS: probiotic | BC | - | |
| NCT03177681 | O | The effect of yogurt in cancer patient with moderate GI symptoms | DS: probiotics in yogurt | Various Cancers | - |
| NCT03642548 | O | Probiotics combined with chemotherapy for patients with advanced NSCLC | Drug with DS of probiotic | NSCLC | - |
| NCT03358511 | O | Engineering gut microbiome to target BC | DS: Probiotic | BC | - |
| NCT02944617 | O | Probiotic yogurt supplement in reducing diarrhea in patients with metastatic kidney cancer being treated with VEGF-TK inhibitor | DS: probiotics in yogurt | Renal Cell Cancer | - |
| NCT02351089 | O | Probiotics in radiation-treated gynecologic cancer (ProRad) | DS: probiotics | Gynecologic Cancer | - |
| NCT03574051 | O | Microbiota are associated with Iodine-131 therapy and hypothyroidism | Iodine-131 Therapy with DS of probiotics | Thyroid Cancer | - |
| NCT03552458 | O | Effects of Probiotics in preventing oral mucositis in patients undergoing head and neck radiotherapy | DS: probiotic | Head-and-neck Cancer | - |
| NCT02819960 | O | prevention of irinotecan-induced diarrhea by probiotics | DS: probiotic | CRC | - |
| NCT01790035 | O | Probiotic LGG for prevention of side-effects in patients undergoing chemoradiation for GI cancer | DS: probiotic LGG | GI Cancer | - |
| NCT00197873 | O | DS: probiotic LGG | CRC | - | |
| NCT02770326 | O | Safety of stool transplant for patients with difficult to treat | FMT | Various Cancers | - |
| NCT02928523 | C | Prevention of dysbiosis complications with autologous FMT in acute myeloid leukemia patients undergoing intensive treatment (ODYSSEE) | Autologous FMT | AML | - |
| NCT03353402 | O | FMT in metastatic melanoma patients who failed immunotherapy | FMT | Melanoma | - |
| NCT03341143 | O | FMT in melanoma patients | FMT with Pembrolizumab | Melanoma | - |
* Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov; Abbreviations: C, Closed; O, Ongoing; GI, Gastrointestinal; DS, Dietary Supplement; CRC, Colorectal Cancer; CC, Colon Cancer; RC, Rectal Cancer; BC, Breast Cancer; NSCLC, Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer; PC, Periampullary Carcinoma; LC, Lung Cancer; HCC, Hepatocellular Carcinoma; AML, Acute Myeloid Leukemia.
The last three-years in vitro and in vivo studies describing the role of LGG in cancer.
| LGG-Mediated Effect | Experimental Model | Target Cells | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-inflammatory and anti-cancer effect in colon DMH cancer model | rats | cancer cells | [ |
| Dendritic cells exposed to LGG induce TH1 polarization and antitumor response potentiation | ex-vivo immune cells | cancer and immune cells | [ |
| Anti-proliferative effects on colon adenocarcinoma cells | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Anti-metastatic effects on malignant cells | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Promotion of IgA production through upregulation of APRIL expression in intestinal epithelial cells | cell culture and mice | cancer and normal cells | [ |
| Change in transcriptome of small intestine cells | mice | normal cells | [ |
| Attenuation of the NLRP6-mediated inflammasomes in the intestine | pigs | normal cells | [ |
| Prevention of polyp formation in colorectal APC/min cancer model | mice | cancer cells | [ |
| Modulation of mTOR and Wnt/β-catenin pathways genes in cancer cell lines (colon, cervical, breast) | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Anti-oxidative effects on CC cells | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Inhibition of growth of hepatic cancer cells | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Anti-cancer effect on oral squamous cell carcinoma | cell culture | cancer cells | [ |
| Reduction of colitis associated cancer | mice | cancer cells | [ |
| Change of gene expression towards anti-inflammatory profile in intestinal porcine epithelial cells | cell culture | normal cells | [ |
| Anti-inflammatory effects in myo-fibroblast colonic cells but not in cancer cells | cell culture and mice | normal cells | [ |
| Attenuation of 5-FU-mediated intestinal injury | mice | normal cells | [ |
| Protection of gut epithelial cells from radiation injury | mice | normal cells | [ |
| Preservation of the gut microbiota balance and intestinal epithelial barrier | pigs | normal cells | [ |
Figure 3Role of probiotics in anti-cancer therapy. Probiotics and Fecal Microbiome Transplantation (FMT) are currently studied as anti-cancer adjuvants to fight dysbiosis following anti-cancer therapy, to increase chemotherapy and immunotherapy efficacy and to both reduce tumor mass and prevent tumor recurrence.