Gut Microbiome and Symptom Burden in Obese and Non-Obese Women Receiving Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer.

Biological research for nursing Pub Date : 2025-07-01 Epub Date: 2025-02-10 DOI:10.1177/10998004251318397
Catherine H Cherwin, Jemmie Hoang, Emily K Roberts, Ashutosh Mangalam
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Abstract

Purpose: Obese women with breast cancer experience high symptom burden, poor quality of life, and increased mortality compared to non-obese women with breast cancer. Obesity-related changes to the bacteria of the gut, the GI microbiome, may be one such mechanism for these differences in outcomes. The purpose of this work is to report symptom burden and GI microbiome composition between obese and non-obese women with breast cancer to identify potential microbial influences for symptom severity. Methods: 59 women with breast cancer (26 obese, 33 non-obese) provided symptom reports using the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale and stool samples for 16S analysis one week after receiving chemotherapy. Symptom reports were summarized and examined for differences based on obesity. Fecal microbiome analysis was compared between groups using alpha-diversity (Shannon index), beta-diversity (Principal Coordinate Analysis with weighted UniFrac distances), and LASSO analysis of abundance of bacterial species. Results: While symptom burden was high, it did not differ based on obesity status. Alpha- and beta-diversity did not find significant differences based on obesity, but LASSO analysis identified eight bacteria to be significantly enriched in obese participants: Collinsella aerofacien, Prevotella 7, Coprobacillus cateniformis, Ruminococcus torques group, Agathobacter, Frisingicoccus, Roseburia inulinivorans, and Monoglobus pectinilyticus. Conclusions: Identifying biologic mechanisms driving symptoms is necessary for the development of therapies to reduce cancer-related symptom burden. While obesity may alter the GI microbiome and influence symptom burden in women with breast cancer, these effects may be outweighed by the effects of chemotherapy on the gut.

肥胖和非肥胖妇女接受乳腺癌化疗的肠道微生物组和症状负担。
目的:与非肥胖乳腺癌妇女相比,肥胖乳腺癌妇女的症状负担高,生活质量差,死亡率增加。与肥胖相关的肠道细菌,胃肠道微生物群的变化,可能是导致这些结果差异的机制之一。这项工作的目的是报告肥胖和非肥胖乳腺癌妇女的症状负担和胃肠道微生物组成,以确定微生物对症状严重程度的潜在影响。方法:59例乳腺癌患者(肥胖26例,非肥胖33例)接受化疗1周后,采用纪念症状评估量表提供症状报告,并采集粪便样本进行16S分析。对症状报告进行总结,并根据肥胖情况检查差异。使用α -多样性(Shannon指数)、β -多样性(加权UniFrac距离的主坐标分析)和LASSO分析细菌种类丰度,比较各组之间的粪便微生物组分析。结果:虽然症状负担高,但肥胖状态的症状负担无差异。α -多样性和β -多样性在肥胖人群中没有发现显著差异,但LASSO分析发现,肥胖参与者中有8种细菌显著富集:aerofacien Collinsella、Prevotella 7、链状Coprobacillus cateniformis、Ruminococcus torques、agaththobacter、Frisingicoccus、Roseburia inulinivorans和Monoglobus pectinilyticus。结论:确定驱动症状的生物学机制对于开发减少癌症相关症状负担的治疗方法是必要的。虽然肥胖可能改变胃肠道微生物群并影响乳腺癌妇女的症状负担,但这些影响可能被化疗对肠道的影响所抵消。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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