Department of Dermatology, Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA.
Research Informatics Core, Research Resources Center, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA.
J Eur Acad Dermatol Venereol. 2022 Sep;36(9):1552-1563. doi: 10.1111/jdv.18125. Epub 2022 Apr 19.
Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma (CTCL) patients often suffer from recurrent skin infections and profound immune dysregulation in advanced disease. The gut microbiome has been recognized to influence cancers and cutaneous conditions; however, it has not yet been studied in CTCL.
To investigate the gut microbiome in patients with CTCL and in healthy controls.
A case-control study was conducted between January 2019 and November 2020 at Northwestern's busy multidisciplinary CTCL clinic (Chicago, Illinois, USA) utilizing 16S ribosomal RNA gene amplicon sequencing and bioinformatics analyses to characterize the microbiota present in fecal samples of CTCL patients (n = 38) and age-matched healthy controls (n = 13) from the same geographical region.
Gut microbial α-diversity trended lower in patients with CTCL and was significantly lower in patients with advanced CTCL relative to controls (P = 0.015). No differences in β-diversity were identified. Specific taxa were significantly reduced in patient samples; significance was determined using adjusted P-values (q-values) that accounted for a false discovery rate threshold of 0.05. Significantly reduced taxa in patient samples included the phylum Actinobacteria (q = 0.0002), classes Coriobacteriia (q = 0.002) and Actinobacteria (q = 0.03), order Coriobacteriales (q = 0.003), and genus Anaerotruncus (q = 0.01). The families Eggerthellaceae (q = 0.0007) and Lactobacillaceae (q = 0.02) were significantly reduced in patients with high skin disease burden.
Gut dysbiosis can be seen in patients with CTCL compared to healthy controls and is pronounced in more advanced CTCL. The taxonomic shifts associated with CTCL are similar to those previously reported in atopic dermatitis and opposite those of psoriasis, suggesting microbial parallels to the immune profile and skin barrier differences between these conditions. These findings may suggest new microbial disease biomarkers and reveal a new angle for intervention.
皮肤 T 细胞淋巴瘤(CTCL)患者在疾病晚期常反复发作皮肤感染和严重免疫失调。肠道微生物群已被认为会影响癌症和皮肤状况;然而,它在 CTCL 中尚未得到研究。
研究 CTCL 患者和健康对照者的肠道微生物群。
2019 年 1 月至 2020 年 11 月,在美国芝加哥西北大学繁忙的多学科 CTCL 诊所进行了一项病例对照研究,利用 16S 核糖体 RNA 基因扩增子测序和生物信息学分析,对来自同一地理区域的 CTCL 患者(n=38)和年龄匹配的健康对照者(n=13)的粪便样本中的微生物群进行了特征描述。
CTCL 患者的肠道微生物 α-多样性呈下降趋势,且晚期 CTCL 患者的肠道微生物 α-多样性明显低于对照组(P=0.015)。β-多样性无差异。患者样本中特定的分类群明显减少;使用调整后的 P 值(q 值)确定了显著性,该值考虑了错误发现率阈值为 0.05。患者样本中显著减少的分类群包括厚壁菌门(q=0.0002)、拟杆菌门(q=0.002)和放线菌门(q=0.03)、Corriobacteriales 目(q=0.003)和 Anaerotruncus 属(q=0.01)。在高皮肤疾病负担的患者中,Eggerthellaceae 科(q=0.0007)和乳杆菌科(q=0.02)显著减少。
与健康对照组相比,CTCL 患者可出现肠道菌群失调,且在更晚期 CTCL 中更为明显。与 CTCL 相关的分类群变化与特应性皮炎先前报道的变化相似,与银屑病的变化相反,这表明微生物与这些疾病的免疫特征和皮肤屏障差异相似。这些发现可能提示新的微生物疾病生物标志物,并揭示干预的新角度。