| Literature DB >> 31905652 |
Gislaine Curty1, Pedro S de Carvalho1, Marcelo A Soares1.
Abstract
The microbiome is able to modulate immune responses, alter the physiology of the human organism, and increase the risk of viral infections and development of diseases such as cancer. In this review, we address changes in the cervical microbiota as potential biomarkers to identify the risk of cervical intraepithelial neoplasia (CIN) development and invasive cervical cancer in the context of human papillomavirus (HPV) infection. Current approaches for clinical diagnostics and the manipulation of microbiota with the use of probiotics and through microbiota transplantation are also discussed.Entities:
Keywords: cervical intraepithelial neoplasia; cervical lesion; cervical microbiota; invasive cervical cancer
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31905652 PMCID: PMC6981542 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21010222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1The impact of microbiota dysbiosis in carcinogenesis. Dysbiotic microbiota (blue and pink rods and circles) may drive carcinogenesis either by modulation of host mechanisms, such as promoting immune response alterations and DNA damage, or by directly eliciting tissue damage, thus facilitating infection by oncoviruses.
Figure 2Bacterial bioproducts modulate cervical microenvironment. Bacterial cervical communities named CSTs (community state types) are displayed on the top of the Figure (A,B) in roman numerals (I, II, III, IV). (A) CST I, II, and V contain dominant Lactobacillus (non-iners) species (dark blue rods) and produce high level of lactic acid, hydrogen peroxide, and bacterial bioproducts (bacteriocins and biosurfactants). (B) CST III shows the Lactobacillus iners-dominant community (pink rods) and CST IV displays bacterial high diversity (light blue rods and circles) with increased frequency of anaerobic species. They both produce less lactic acid and exhibit inerolysin, sialidase, and butyric acid production. In addition, CST III and IV modulate immune responses by induction of proinflammatory cytokine production and recruitment of CD4+CCR5+ lymphocytes to the cervical region.
Figure 3Bacterial diversity distribution in intraepithelial neoplasia progression. The scheme displays the progression of the cervical epithelium from normal to invasive cervical cancer, as well as the bacterial diversity (alpha-diversity) and the species abundance in the cervical microenvironment at each cytological stage. The normal cytology is commonly associated with CSTs I, II, or V, which are Lactobacillus species (non-iners)-dominant (light green rods). However, following the cervical disease progression, the relative abundance of Lactobacillus non-iners species start to decrease. Concomitant to that, alpha-diversity increases and the microbiota is changed to CST III (pink rods and circles) or IV (light blue and pink shapes). Some bacterial species were found, in different studies, associated with cervical disease progression. They are also displayed in this figure in a representative graph of relative abundance (lower panel).
Highlights of clinical trials that explored the use of probiotics to bacterial vaginosis treatment, HPV infection and abnormal cervical cytology. BV, bacterial vaginosis; AV, aerobic vaginitis; VVC, vulvovaginal candidiasis.
| Study | Treatment | Study Characteristics | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heczko et al., 2015 [ | Oral metronidazole 500 mg twice daily for seven days together with an oral probiotic preparation (prOVag®) containing | 578 participants (118 receiving antibiotic together with prOVag and 241 treated with antibiotic together with placebo); | Treatment with probiotics lengthened the time to a clinical relapse. The average time to a BV/AV relapse event was 71.4 days for women treated with prOVag and 47.3 days for the placebo group ( |
| Recine et al., 2016 | Oral metronidazole 500 mg twice a day for seven days together with vaginal tablets of | 250 participants (Group A: 125 women subjected to metronidazol alone and Group B: 125 patients receiving antibiotic together with probiotic). | After 2 months of treatment, 90.4% of Group B patients showed BV clinical remission, compared to 79.4% in Group A subjects ( |
| Laue et al., 2018 [ | 500 mg of oral metronidazole twice a day for seven days together with 125g yoghurt drink twice daily for 4 weeks. The yoghurt drink ( | 36 participants were randomly assigned to a metronidazole plus probiotic arm ( | Post-intervention, all women receiving antibiotic plus probiotics showed recovery from BV, while 35.3% of patients after antibiotic plus placebo remained with the condition according to Amsel criteria ( |
| Verdenelli et al., 2016 | Vaginal suppository SYNBIO® | 35 apparently healthy women from Italy were enrolled. | After treatment, 50% of the women with an intermediate Nugent score reverted to the normal state. |
| Tomusiak et al., 2015 | InVag® vaginal capsules containing | 160 women of European descent and with dysbiotic vaginal microbiome were enrolled. | For InVag subjects, there was a significant reduction in vaginal pH between visits I and III ( |
| Palma et al., 2018 | 500 mg of metronidazole twice a day for 7 days or daily fluconazole (150 mg) for two consecutive days together with vaginal tablets of | 117 subjects were randomly assigned to the short-term probiotic administration (group 1, | 3 months after treatment, statistically significant differences were not found between groups 1 and 2. |
| Verhoeven et al., 2012 | Daily consumption of a commercially available probiotic drink (Yakult) containing | 54 HPV+ women with LSIL were assigned to a group receiving probiotics or to a group without intervention (control). | 60% of probiotic-consuming patients solved the cytological abnormalities against 30.7% patients without intervention ( |