Hillege Lars E, Trepka Kai R, Ziemons Janine, Aarnoutse Romy, Guthrie Benjamin G H, de Vos-Geelen Judith, Valkenburg-van Iersel Liselot, van Hellemond Irene E G, Baars Arnold, Vestjens Johanna H M J, Penders John, Deutschbauer Adam, Atreya Chloe E, Kidder Wesley A, Turnbaugh Peter J, Smidt Marjolein L
GROW - Research Institute for Oncology and Reproduction, Maastricht University; Maastricht, Netherlands.
Department of Surgery, Maastricht University Medical Center+; Maastricht, Netherlands.
medRxiv. 2024 Oct 15:2024.10.11.24315249. doi: 10.1101/2024.10.11.24315249.
Unpredictable chemotherapy side effects are a major barrier to successful treatment. Cell culture and mouse experiments indicate that the gut microbiota is influenced by and influences anti-cancer drugs. However, metagenomic data from patients paired to careful side effect monitoring remains limited. Herein, we focus on the oral fluoropyrimidine capecitabine (CAP). We investigate CAP-microbiome interactions through metagenomic sequencing of longitudinal stool sampling from a cohort of advanced colorectal cancer (CRC) patients.
We established a prospective cohort study including 56 patients with advanced CRC treated with CAP monotherapy across 4 centers in the Netherlands. Stool samples and clinical questionnaires were collected at baseline, during cycle 3, and post-treatment. Metagenomic sequencing to assess microbial community structure and gene abundance was paired with transposon mutagenesis, targeted gene deletion, and media supplementation experiments. An independent US cohort was used for model validation.
CAP treatment significantly altered gut microbial composition and pathway abundance, enriching for menaquinol (vitamin K2) biosynthesis genes. Transposon library screens, targeted gene deletions, and media supplementation confirmed that menaquinol biosynthesis protects from drug toxicity. Microbial menaquinol biosynthesis genes were associated with decreased peripheral sensory neuropathy. Machine learning models trained in this cohort predicted hand-foot syndrome and dose reductions in an independent cohort.
These results suggest treatment-associated increases in microbial vitamin biosynthesis serve a chemoprotective role for bacterial and host cells, with implications for toxicities outside the gastrointestinal tract. We provide a for the use of microbiome profiling and machine learning to predict drug toxicities across independent cohorts. These observations provide a foundation for future human intervention studies, more in-depth mechanistic dissection in preclinical models, and extension to other cancer treatments.
不可预测的化疗副作用是成功治疗的主要障碍。细胞培养和小鼠实验表明,肠道微生物群受到抗癌药物的影响并能影响抗癌药物。然而,与仔细的副作用监测配对的患者宏基因组数据仍然有限。在此,我们聚焦于口服氟嘧啶卡培他滨(CAP)。我们通过对一组晚期结直肠癌(CRC)患者的纵向粪便样本进行宏基因组测序,研究CAP与微生物群的相互作用。
我们开展了一项前瞻性队列研究,纳入了荷兰4个中心接受CAP单药治疗的56例晚期CRC患者。在基线、第3周期和治疗后收集粪便样本和临床问卷。将用于评估微生物群落结构和基因丰度的宏基因组测序与转座子诱变、靶向基因缺失和培养基补充实验相结合。使用一个独立的美国队列进行模型验证。
CAP治疗显著改变了肠道微生物组成和通路丰度,使甲基萘醌(维生素K2)生物合成基因富集。转座子文库筛选实验、靶向基因缺失实验和培养基补充实验证实,甲基萘醌生物合成可保护机体免受药物毒性。微生物甲基萘醌生物合成基因与周围感觉神经病变的减轻有关。在此队列中训练的机器学习模型能够预测独立队列中的手足综合征和剂量减少情况。
这些结果表明,与治疗相关的微生物维生素生物合成增加对细菌和宿主细胞起到化学保护作用,并对胃肠道以外的毒性产生影响。我们提供了一个利用微生物群分析和机器学习来预测独立队列中药物毒性的范例。这些观察结果为未来的人体干预研究、在临床前模型中进行更深入的机制剖析以及扩展到其他癌症治疗奠定了基础。