Ozaki Yuki, Suzuki Yoshiki, Nishiyama Kyoko, Suzutani Tatsuo, Suzuki Hiroyuki
Dept. of Chest Surgery, Fukushima Medical University.
Gan To Kagaku Ryoho. 2021 Sep;48(9):1096-1099.
Immune checkpoint inhibitors(ICIs)are playing an increasingly important role in the treatment of cancer. In the field of lung cancer, ICIs are widely administered from primary therapy to maintenance therapy after chemoradiation for non-small cell lung cancer. However, excluding tumor proportion score(TPS)for PD-L1, no other biomarker has been reported to be clinically useful. While many biomarkers are being searched for, analysis of intestinal microbiota is attracting attention as a parameter that may reflect immune status. Research on the relationship between ICIs and gut microbiota has expanded worldwide after 2 reports in Science in 2015. In a study in which the gut microbiota of ICI-treated patients was transplanted into germ-free mice, enhanced antitumor effects were observed in the group that received gut microbiota from the response group, suggesting the possibility of stool transplantation. At the same time, when Akkermansia muciniphila, which is one of the mucin-degrading bacteria, was ingested by mice transplanted with non-responsive gut microbiota, a portion of tumor-infiltrating T cells increased on tumor localization, indicating the effect of changes in gut microbiota. In addition, there is a possibility that the anti-tumor effect may be enhanced by the effect of metabolites on immune cells in the blood rather than the gut microbiota itself, and the analysis of metabolites produced by bacteria is attracting attention. In our department, we have analyzed the intestinal microbiota of 25 non-small cell lung cancer patients treated with anti- PD-1 antibody. Although we have achieved diversity and identification of specific bacterial species, analysis of bacterial metabolites will be important in the future when considering the impact of the intestinal microbiota on immune cells. The gut microbiota is not only a biomarker for the treatment of ICIs, but also has the potential to create an immune state that facilitates the effects of ICI by changing the gut environment and metabolites.
免疫检查点抑制剂(ICIs)在癌症治疗中发挥着越来越重要的作用。在肺癌领域,ICIs广泛应用于非小细胞肺癌的从一线治疗到放化疗后的维持治疗。然而,除了PD-L1的肿瘤比例评分(TPS)外,尚无其他生物标志物被报道具有临床实用性。虽然人们正在寻找许多生物标志物,但肠道微生物群分析作为一个可能反映免疫状态的参数正受到关注。自2015年《科学》杂志发表两篇报道后,关于ICIs与肠道微生物群关系的研究在全球范围内不断扩展。在一项将接受ICIs治疗患者的肠道微生物群移植到无菌小鼠体内的研究中,接受反应组肠道微生物群的小鼠组观察到抗肿瘤作用增强,提示了粪便移植的可能性。同时,当用无反应的肠道微生物群移植的小鼠摄入粘蛋白降解菌之一的嗜粘蛋白阿克曼氏菌时,肿瘤局部的一部分肿瘤浸润性T细胞增加,表明肠道微生物群变化的作用。此外,抗肿瘤作用可能是由细菌产生的代谢产物对血液中的免疫细胞的作用而非肠道微生物群本身增强的,细菌产生的代谢产物分析正受到关注。在我们科室,我们分析了25例接受抗PD-1抗体治疗的非小细胞肺癌患者的肠道微生物群。虽然我们已经实现了肠道微生物群的多样性和特定细菌种类的鉴定,但在考虑肠道微生物群对免疫细胞的影响时,细菌代谢产物的分析在未来将很重要。肠道微生物群不仅是ICIs治疗的生物标志物,而且有可能通过改变肠道环境和代谢产物来创造一种有利于ICIs发挥作用的免疫状态。