| Literature DB >> 31737576 |
Mridula Vardhan1, Zia Flaminio1, Sakshi Sapru1, Charles P Tilley2, Mei R Fu2, Christopher Comfort3, Xin Li1, Deepak Saxena1,4.
Abstract
Malignant fungating wounds present in 5-14% of advanced cancer patients in the United States and are a result of cancerous cells infiltrating and proliferating in the skin. Presentation of malignant fungating wounds often occurs in the last 6 months of life and therefore become symbols of impending death for patients and their families. Due to the incurable and severe nature of these wounds, patients require palliative care until death to minimize pain and suffering. Symptoms associated with these chronic wounds include malodor, pain, bleeding, necrosis, large amounts of exudate, increased microbial growth, and more. Limited research using culture-based techniques has been conducted on malignant fungating wounds and therefore no optimal approach to treating these wounds has been established. Despite limited data, associations between the cutaneous microbiome of these wounds and severity of symptoms have been made. The presence of at least one strain of obligate anaerobic bacteria is linked with severe odor and exudate. A concentration of over 105/g bacteria is linked with increased pain and exudate. Bacterial metabolites such as DMTS and putrescine are linked with components of malignant fungating wound odor and degradation of periwound skin. The few but significant associations made between the malignant fungating wound microbiome and severity of symptoms indicate that further study on this topic using 16S rRNA gene sequencing may reveal potential therapeutic targets within the microbiome to significantly improve current methods of treatment used in the palliative care approach.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; malignant fungating wound; metabolomics; microbiome; pain; palliative care; skin microbiome
Year: 2019 PMID: 31737576 PMCID: PMC6838011 DOI: 10.3389/fcimb.2019.00373
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Cell Infect Microbiol ISSN: 2235-2988 Impact factor: 5.293
Figure 1Simplified relationship between the main contributors to MFW symptoms.
Figure 2Key points of this literature review.