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Fecal Akkermansia muciniphila Is Associated with Body Composition and Microbiota Diversity in Overweight and Obese Women with Breast Cancer Participating in a Presurgical Weight Loss Trial.

Authors :
Frugé, Andrew D.
Van der Pol, William
Rogers, Laura Q.
Morrow, Casey D.
Tsuruta, Yuko
Demark-Wahnefried, Wendy
Source :
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics. Apr2020, Vol. 120 Issue 4, p650-659. 10p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Akkermansia muciniphila (AM) is a gram-negative, mucin-degrading bacteria inhabiting the gastrointestinal tract associated with host phenotypes and disease states. Explore characteristics of overweight and obese female early-stage (0 to II) breast cancer patients with low AM relative abundance (LAM) vs high (HAM) enrolled in a presurgical weight-loss trial. Secondary analysis of pooled participants in a randomized controlled trial (NCT02224807). During the period from 2014 to 2017, 32 female patients with breast cancer were randomized to weight-loss or attention-control arms from time of diagnosis-to-lumpectomy (mean=30±9 days). All were instructed to correct nutrient deficiencies via food sources and on upper-body exercises. The weight-loss group received additional guidance to promote 0.5 to 1 kg/wk weight-loss via energy restriction and aerobic exercise. At baseline and follow-up, sera, fecal samples, two-24 hour dietary recalls and dual x-ray absorptiometry were obtained. Bacterial DNA was isolated from feces and polymerase chain reaction (16S) amplified. Inflammatory cytokines were measured in sera. Differences between LAM and HAM participants were analyzed using t tests and nonparametric tests. Spearman correlations explored relationships between continuous variables. Participants were aged 61±9 years with body mass index 34.8±6. Mean AM relative abundance was 0.02% (0.007% to 0.06%) and 1.59% (0.59% to 13.57%) for LAM and HAM participants, respectively. At baseline, women with HAM vs LAM had lower fat mass (38.9±11.2 kg vs 46.4±9.0 kg; P =0.044). Alpha diversity (ie, species richness) was higher in women with HAM (360.8±84.8 vs 282.4±69.6; P =0.008) at baseline, but attenuated after weight-loss (P =0.058). At baseline, interleukin-6 level was associated with species richness (ρ=–0.471, P =0.008) and fat mass (ρ=0.529, P =0.002), but not AM. Change in total dietary fiber was positively associated with AM in LAM (ρ=0.626, P =0.002), but not HAM (ρ=0.436, P =0.180) participants. Among women with early-stage breast cancer, body composition is associated with AM, microbiota diversity, and interleukin-6 level. AM may mediate the effects of dietary fiber in improving microbiota composition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
22122672
Volume :
120
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142296791
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jand.2018.08.164