Abstract

Oral candidiasis is a common side effect of cancer chemotherapy. To better understand predisposing factors, we followed forty-five subjects who received 5-fluorouracil- or doxorubicin-based treatment, during one chemotherapy cycle. Subjects were evaluated at baseline, prior to the first infusion, and at three additional visits within a two-week window. We assessed the demographic, medical and oral health parameters, neutrophil surveillance, and characterized the salivary bacteriome and mycobiome communities through amplicon high throughput sequencing. Twenty percent of all subjects developed oral candidiasis. Using multivariate statistics, we identified smoking, amount of dental plaque, low bacteriome and mycobiome alpha-diversity, and the proportions of specific bacterial and fungal taxa as baseline predictors of oral candidiasis development during the treatment cycle. All subjects who developed oral candidiasis had baseline microbiome communities dominated by Candida and enriched in aciduric bacteria. Longitudinally, oral candidiasis was associated with a decrease in salivary flow prior to lesion development, and occurred simultaneously or before oral mucositis. Candidiasis was also longitudinally associated with a decrease in peripheral neutrophils but increased the neutrophil killing capacity of Candida albicans. Oral candidiasis was not found to be associated with mycobiome structure shifts during the cycle but was the result of an increase in Candida load, with C. albicans and Candida dubliniensis being the most abundant species comprising the salivary mycobiome of the affected subjects. In conclusion, we identified a set of clinical and microbiome baseline factors associated with susceptibility to oral candidiasis, which might be useful tools in identifying at risk individuals, prior to chemotherapy.

Highlights

  • Cancer chemotherapy is associated with comorbidities, with the oral cavity representing one of the most severely affected body sites

  • C. albicans, followed by C. tropicalis and C. glabrata as the most frequent species associated with this infection

  • Using generation sequencing methods, we confirmed that C. albicans is the main species associated with oral candidiasis, in the chemotherapy setting, and identified

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer chemotherapy is associated with comorbidities, with the oral cavity representing one of the most severely affected body sites. In patients with hematologic malignancies who are treated aggressively with a high dose of cytotoxic chemotherapy, the incidence of oral candidiasis is higher and the consequences from this infection are more severe than in patients receiving low-dose chemotherapeutic regimens. A previous large-scale retrospective study of hematologic cancer patients identified more intensive chemotherapy and longer lasting severe leukopenia as clinical parameters increasing the risk of oral and systemic candidiasis. In this large cohort, almost all patients who developed oral candidiasis later developed fatal, systemic candidiasis [7]. Prospective, longitudinal studies with newer cancer chemotherapy regimens are needed to identify the underlying factors of increased susceptibility to oral candidiasis

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