Literature DB >> 35657343

The oral microbiome and breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease, and its relationship with the fecal microbiome in the Ghana Breast Health Study.

Zeni Wu1, Doratha A Byrd1,2, Yunhu Wan1, Daniel Ansong3, Joe-Nat Clegg-Lamptey4, Beatrice Wiafe-Addai5, Lawrence Edusei4, Ernest Adjei3, Nicholas Titiloye3, Florence Dedey4, Francis Aitpillah3, Joseph Oppong3, Verna Vanderpuye4, Ernest Osei-Bonsu3, Casey L Dagnall1,6, Kristine Jones1,6, Amy Hutchinson1,6, Belynda D Hicks1,6, Thomas U Ahearn1, Jianxin Shi1, Rob Knight7, Richard Biritwum8, Joel Yarney4, Seth Wiafe9, Baffour Awuah3, Kofi Nyarko8, Jonine D Figueroa1,10, Rashmi Sinha1, Montserrat Garcia-Closas1, Louise A Brinton1, Emily Vogtmann1.   

Abstract

The oral microbiome, like the fecal microbiome, may be related to breast cancer risk. Therefore, we investigated whether the oral microbiome was associated with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease, and its relationship with the fecal microbiome in a case-control study in Ghana. A total of 881 women were included (369 breast cancers, 93 nonmalignant cases and 419 population-based controls). The V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was sequenced from oral and fecal samples. Alpha-diversity (observed amplicon sequence variants [ASVs], Shannon index and Faith's Phylogenetic Diversity) and beta-diversity (Bray-Curtis, Jaccard and weighted and unweighted UniFrac) metrics were computed. MiRKAT and logistic regression models were used to investigate the case-control associations. Oral sample alpha-diversity was inversely associated with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease with odds ratios (95% CIs) per every 10 observed ASVs of 0.86 (0.83-0.89) and 0.79 (0.73-0.85), respectively, compared to controls. Beta-diversity was also associated with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease compared to controls (P ≤ .001). The relative abundances of Porphyromonas and Fusobacterium were lower for breast cancer cases compared to controls. Alpha-diversity and presence/relative abundance of specific genera from the oral and fecal microbiome were strongly correlated among breast cancer cases, but weakly correlated among controls. Particularly, the relative abundance of oral Porphyromonas was strongly, inversely correlated with fecal Bacteroides among breast cancer cases (r = -.37, P ≤ .001). Many oral microbial metrics were strongly associated with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease, and strongly correlated with fecal microbiome among breast cancer cases, but not controls.
© 2022 UICC. This article has been contributed to by US Government employees and their work is in the public domain in the USA.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Ghana; breast cancer; fecal microbiome; nonmalignant breast diseases; oral microbiome

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35657343      PMCID: PMC9420782          DOI: 10.1002/ijc.34145

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Cancer        ISSN: 0020-7136            Impact factor:   7.316


  39 in total

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Authors:  S S Socransky; A D Haffajee; M A Cugini; C Smith; R L Kent
Journal:  J Clin Periodontol       Date:  1998-02       Impact factor: 8.728

Review 2.  Breast cancer in Sub-Saharan Africa: opportunities for prevention.

Authors:  Louise A Brinton; Jonine D Figueroa; Baffour Awuah; Joel Yarney; Seth Wiafe; Shannon N Wood; Daniel Ansong; Kofi Nyarko; Beatrice Wiafe-Addai; Joe Nat Clegg-Lamptey
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2014-03-07       Impact factor: 4.872

3.  Reproducible, interactive, scalable and extensible microbiome data science using QIIME 2.

Authors:  Evan Bolyen; Jai Ram Rideout; Matthew R Dillon; Nicholas A Bokulich; Christian C Abnet; Gabriel A Al-Ghalith; Harriet Alexander; Eric J Alm; Manimozhiyan Arumugam; Francesco Asnicar; Yang Bai; Jordan E Bisanz; Kyle Bittinger; Asker Brejnrod; Colin J Brislawn; C Titus Brown; Benjamin J Callahan; Andrés Mauricio Caraballo-Rodríguez; John Chase; Emily K Cope; Ricardo Da Silva; Christian Diener; Pieter C Dorrestein; Gavin M Douglas; Daniel M Durall; Claire Duvallet; Christian F Edwardson; Madeleine Ernst; Mehrbod Estaki; Jennifer Fouquier; Julia M Gauglitz; Sean M Gibbons; Deanna L Gibson; Antonio Gonzalez; Kestrel Gorlick; Jiarong Guo; Benjamin Hillmann; Susan Holmes; Hannes Holste; Curtis Huttenhower; Gavin A Huttley; Stefan Janssen; Alan K Jarmusch; Lingjing Jiang; Benjamin D Kaehler; Kyo Bin Kang; Christopher R Keefe; Paul Keim; Scott T Kelley; Dan Knights; Irina Koester; Tomasz Kosciolek; Jorden Kreps; Morgan G I Langille; Joslynn Lee; Ruth Ley; Yong-Xin Liu; Erikka Loftfield; Catherine Lozupone; Massoud Maher; Clarisse Marotz; Bryan D Martin; Daniel McDonald; Lauren J McIver; Alexey V Melnik; Jessica L Metcalf; Sydney C Morgan; Jamie T Morton; Ahmad Turan Naimey; Jose A Navas-Molina; Louis Felix Nothias; Stephanie B Orchanian; Talima Pearson; Samuel L Peoples; Daniel Petras; Mary Lai Preuss; Elmar Pruesse; Lasse Buur Rasmussen; Adam Rivers; Michael S Robeson; Patrick Rosenthal; Nicola Segata; Michael Shaffer; Arron Shiffer; Rashmi Sinha; Se Jin Song; John R Spear; Austin D Swafford; Luke R Thompson; Pedro J Torres; Pauline Trinh; Anupriya Tripathi; Peter J Turnbaugh; Sabah Ul-Hasan; Justin J J van der Hooft; Fernando Vargas; Yoshiki Vázquez-Baeza; Emily Vogtmann; Max von Hippel; William Walters; Yunhu Wan; Mingxun Wang; Jonathan Warren; Kyle C Weber; Charles H D Williamson; Amy D Willis; Zhenjiang Zech Xu; Jesse R Zaneveld; Yilong Zhang; Qiyun Zhu; Rob Knight; J Gregory Caporaso
Journal:  Nat Biotechnol       Date:  2019-08       Impact factor: 54.908

4.  Female sex hormones modulate Porphyromonas gingivalis lipopolysaccharide-induced Toll-like receptor signaling in primary human monocytes.

Authors:  P Jitprasertwong; N Charadram; S Kumphune; S Pongcharoen; S Sirisinha
Journal:  J Periodontal Res       Date:  2015-09-14       Impact factor: 4.419

5.  Global cancer statistics 2018: GLOBOCAN estimates of incidence and mortality worldwide for 36 cancers in 185 countries.

Authors:  Freddie Bray; Jacques Ferlay; Isabelle Soerjomataram; Rebecca L Siegel; Lindsey A Torre; Ahmedin Jemal
Journal:  CA Cancer J Clin       Date:  2018-09-12       Impact factor: 508.702

6.  The Association Between Periodontal Disease and Breast Cancer in a Prospective Cohort Study.

Authors:  Mengmeng Jia; Zeni Wu; Emily Vogtmann; Katie M O'Brien; Clarice R Weinberg; Dale P Sandler; Gretchen L Gierach
Journal:  Cancer Prev Res (Phila)       Date:  2020-07-29

Review 7.  Relationship between gingival inflammation and pregnancy.

Authors:  Min Wu; Shao-Wu Chen; Shao-Yun Jiang
Journal:  Mediators Inflamm       Date:  2015-03-22       Impact factor: 4.711

8.  Functional signatures of oral dysbiosis during periodontitis progression revealed by microbial metatranscriptome analysis.

Authors:  Susan Yost; Ana E Duran-Pinedo; Ricardo Teles; Keerthana Krishnan; Jorge Frias-Lopez
Journal:  Genome Med       Date:  2015-04-27       Impact factor: 11.117

Review 9.  Receptor-defined subtypes of breast cancer in indigenous populations in Africa: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Amanda Eng; Valerie McCormack; Isabel dos-Santos-Silva
Journal:  PLoS Med       Date:  2014-09-09       Impact factor: 11.069

10.  Same Exposure but Two Radically Different Responses to Antibiotics: Resilience of the Salivary Microbiome versus Long-Term Microbial Shifts in Feces.

Authors:  Egija Zaura; Bernd W Brandt; M Joost Teixeira de Mattos; Mark J Buijs; Martien P M Caspers; Mamun-Ur Rashid; Andrej Weintraub; Carl Erik Nord; Ann Savell; Yanmin Hu; Antony R Coates; Mike Hubank; David A Spratt; Michael Wilson; Bart J F Keijser; Wim Crielaard
Journal:  MBio       Date:  2015-11-10       Impact factor: 7.867

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