1. Neuroblastoma is associated with alterations in gut microbiome composition subsequent to maternal microbial seedingResearch in context
- Author
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Mireia Valles-Colomer, Paolo Manghi, Fabio Cumbo, Giulia Masetti, Federica Armanini, Francesco Asnicar, Aitor Blanco-Miguez, Federica Pinto, Michal Punčochář, Alberto Garaventa, Loredana Amoroso, Mirco Ponzoni, Maria Valeria Corrias, and Nicola Segata
- Subjects
Neuroblastoma ,Paediatric cancer ,Gut microbiome ,Metagenomics ,Mother-infant transmission ,Medicine ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Summary: Background: Neuroblastoma is the most frequent extracranial solid tumour in children, accounting for ∼15% of deaths due to cancer in childhood. The most common clinical presentation are abdominal tumours. An altered gut microbiome composition has been linked to multiple cancer types, and reported in murine models of neuroblastoma. Whether children with neuroblastoma display alterations in gut microbiome composition remains unexplored. Methods: We assessed gut microbiome composition by shotgun metagenomic profiling in an observational cross-sectional study on 288 individuals, consisting of patients with a diagnosis of neuroblastoma at disease onset (N = 63), healthy controls matching the patients on the main covariates of microbiome composition (N = 94), healthy siblings of the patients (N = 13), mothers of patients (N = 59), and mothers of the controls (N = 59). We examined taxonomic and functional microbiome composition and mother-infant strain transmission patterns. Findings: Patients with neuroblastoma displayed alterations in gut microbiome composition characterised by reduced microbiome richness, decreased relative abundances of 18 species (including Phocaeicola dorei and Bifidobacterium bifidum), enriched protein fermentation and reduced carbohydrate fermentation potential. Using machine learning, we could successfully discriminate patients from controls (AUC = 82%). Healthy siblings did not display such alterations but resembled the healthy control group. No significant differences in maternal microbiome composition nor mother-to-offspring transmission were detected. Interpretation: Patients with neuroblastoma display alterations in taxonomic and functional gut microbiome composition, which cannot be traced to differential maternal seeding. Follow-up research should include investigating potential causal links. Funding: Italian Ministry of Health Ricerca Corrente and Ricerca Finalizzata 5 per mille (to MPonzoni); Fondazione Italiana Neuroblastoma (to MPonzoni); European Research Council (ERC-StG project MetaPG-716575 and ERC-CoG microTOUCH-101045015 to NS); the European H2020 program ONCOBIOME-825410 project (to NS); the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health 1U01CA230551 (to NS); the Premio Internazionale Lombardia e Ricerca 2019 (to NS); the MIUR Progetti di Ricerca di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale (PRIN) Bando 2017 Grant 2017J3E2W2 (to NS); EMBO ALTF 593-2020 and Knowledge Generation Project from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (PID2022-139328OA-I00) (to MV-C).
- Published
- 2024
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