AI Article Synopsis

  • Gut microbiota alterations are linked to gastric cancer development, with significant shifts in composition and diversity observed in cancer patients compared to healthy individuals.
  • The study identified Lactobacillus and Megasphaera as predictive markers for gastric cancer, suggesting their potential role in diagnosis.
  • Chemotherapy impacts the gut microbiome by reducing the abundance of certain bacteria, and gastritis exhibits some microbiome characteristics similar to those found in gastric cancer.

Article Abstract

Gut microbiota have been implicated in the development of cancer. Colorectal and gastric cancers, the major gastrointestinal tract cancers, are closely connected with the gut microbiome. Nevertheless, the characteristics of gut microbiota composition that correlate with gastric cancer are unclear. In this study, we investigated gut microbiota alterations during the progression of gastric cancer to identify the most relevant taxa associated with gastric cancer and evaluated the potential of the microbiome as an indicator for the diagnosis of gastric cancer. Compared with the healthy group, gut microbiota composition and diversity shifted in patients with gastric cancer. Different bacteria were used to design a random forest model, which provided an area under the curve value of 0.91. Verification samples achieved a true positive rate of 0.83 in gastric cancer. Principal component analysis showed that gastritis shares some microbiome characteristics of gastric cancer. Chemotherapy reduced the elevated bacteria levels in gastric cancer by more than half. More importantly, we found that the genera Lactobacillus and Megasphaera were associated with gastric cancer.Key Points• Gut microbiota has high sensitivity and specificity in distinguishing patients with gastric cancer from healthy individuals, indicating that gut microbiota is a potential noninvasive tool for the diagnosis of gastric cancer.• Gastritis shares some microbiota features with gastric cancer, and chemotherapy reduces the microbial abundance and diversity in gastric cancer patients.• Two bacterial taxa, namely, Lactobacillus and Megasphaera, are predictive markers for gastric cancer.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00253-020-11043-7DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gastric cancer
52
gut microbiota
24
gastric
16
cancer
14
gut
8
gut microbiome
8
microbiome characteristics
8
microbiota composition
8
associated gastric
8
diagnosis gastric
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!