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Gut microbiota diversity is associated with cardiorespiratory fitness in post‐primary treatment breast cancer survivors

Authors :
Nianjun Liu
William Van Der Pol
Jesseca A. Paulsen
Gary R. Hunter
Laura Q. Rogers
Casey D. Morrow
Stephen J. Carter
J. Walker Blackston
Elliot J. Lefkowitz
Source :
Experimental Physiology. 104:529-539
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

NEW FINDINGS What is the central question of this study? Does the link between cardiorespiratory fitness and gut microbiota diversity persist after adjusting for the potential effects of percentage body fat and activity-related energy expenditure (AEE)? What is the main finding and its importance? This is the first study to examine the link between cardiorespiratory fitness and gut microbiota diversity while accounting for the underlying effects of percentage body fat and free-living AEE. Results from the present work suggest that cardiorespiratory fitness, not physical activity, is a superior correlate of gut microbiota diversity among post-primary treatment, non-metastatic breast cancer survivors. ABSTRACT Cancer treatment uniquely triggers multiple physiological shifts detrimental to overall health. Although previous research indicates a link between the gut microbiota and cardiorespiratory fitness, it is unclear whether these findings are attributable to potential underlying effects of percentage body fat or free-living activity energy expenditure (AEE). The microbe composition of faecal specimens from 37 breast cancer survivors was determined using 16S microbiome analyses. Individual-sample microbiota diversity (α-diversity) and between-sample community differences (β-diversity) were examined. Peak oxygen uptake ( VO2peak ) was estimated from a graded exercise test consistent with the modified Naughton protocol, in which exercise terminates at 85% of age-predicted maximal heart rate. The AEE was measured over 10 days using doubly labelled water, wherein the percentage body fat was calculated from total body water. Pearson correlations revealed α-diversity indices (Chao1, observed species, PD whole tree and Shannon) to be positively associated with VO2peak (r = 0.34-0.51; P

Details

ISSN :
1469445X and 09580670
Volume :
104
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Experimental Physiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85e53cfeb287f2109e159cfeb3a4580c