Abstract

In the recent decade, gut microbiota has received growing interest due to its role in human health and disease. On the one hand, by utilizing the signaling pathways of the host and interacting with the immune system, the gut microbiota is able to maintain the homeostasis in human body. This important role is mainly modulated by the composition of microbiota, as a normal microbiota composition is responsible for maintaining the homeostasis of human body, while an altered microbiota profile could contribute to several pathogenic conditions and may further lead to oncogenesis and tumor progression. Moreover, recent insights have especially focused on the important role of gut microbiota in current anticancer therapies, including chemotherapy, radiotherapy, immunotherapy and surgery. Research findings have indicated a bidirectional interplay between gut microbiota and these therapeutic methods, in which the implementation of different therapeutic methods could lead to different alterations in gut microbiota, and the presence of gut microbiota could in turn contribute to different therapeutic responses. As a result, manipulating the gut microbiota to reduce the therapy-induced toxicity may provide an adjuvant therapy to achieve a better therapeutic outcome. Given the complex role of gut microbiota in cancer treatment, this review summarizes the interactions between gut microbiota and anticancer therapies, and demonstrates the current strategies for reshaping gut microbiota community, aiming to provide possibilities for finding an alternative approach to lower the damage and improve the efficacy of cancer therapy.

Highlights

  • Cancer is one of the leading causes of death worldwide

  • Previous research findings suggest that collateral damage in the abdominopelvic region caused by radiotherapy can lead to bowel injury [4], and 80% of cancer patient suffer from chemotherapy-induced gastrointestinal toxicity (CIGT), with symptoms of diarrhea and abdominal pain [5]

  • In 1958, Eiseman and colleagues first described this therapeutic method for presumed severe Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) in a case series, which is to transplant functional microbiota from healthy individuals into the gastrointestinal tract of patients to rebuild the normally functioning intestinal microbiota [87, 88]. It was not until 2012 that Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) was first linked to cancer treatment by Neemann et al, and in this case by performing FMT, a patient with acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL) successfully recovered from severe CDI induced by the immunocompromised condition after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplant [89]

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Summary

Exploring the Modulatory Effects of Gut Microbiota in

Gut microbiota has received growing interest due to its role in human health and disease. By utilizing the signaling pathways of the host and interacting with the immune system, the gut microbiota is able to maintain the homeostasis in human body. This important role is mainly modulated by the composition of microbiota, as a normal microbiota composition is responsible for maintaining the homeostasis of human body, while an altered microbiota profile could contribute to several pathogenic conditions and may further lead to oncogenesis and tumor progression. Given the complex role of gut microbiota in cancer treatment, this review summarizes the interactions between gut microbiota and anticancer therapies, and demonstrates the current strategies for reshaping gut microbiota community, aiming to provide possibilities for finding an alternative approach to lower the damage and improve the efficacy of cancer therapy

INTRODUCTION
THE IMPACT OF GUT MICROBIOTA ON ONCOGENESIS AND TUMOR PROGRESSION
Microbiota and Chemotherapy
Microbiota and Immunotherapy
Microbiota and Surgery
Microbiota and Radiotherapy
MANIPULATING GUT MICROBIOTA TO ACHIEVE BETTER THERAPEUTIC EFFICACY
Dietary Factors
Findings
CONCLUSIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS
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