Abstract 577P
Background
Dysbiosis of the fecal microbiota has been closely related to colorectal cancer (CRC) and has increasingly proven to be associated with CRC prognosis. However, a significant knowledge gap still exists regarding intestinal tissue-resident microbes and their associations with host genetic alterations, gene expressions and prognosis in CRC.
Methods
We undertook a comprehensive analysis of the tissue-resident microbes in CRC patients from the U-CAN cohort, a large prospective longitudinal study of adult cancer patients in Sweden, using treatment-naïve whole-genome (average 53x coverage) and whole-transcriptome sequencing data of tumors (n=937) and their adjacent normal tissues (n=475).
Results
In total, 301 genera and 420 species were identified as common tissue-resident taxa. We showed for the first-time distinct enrichment patterns of tissue-resident microbiome in the right- and left-sided colons. Importantly, these patterns were highly consistent between tumor and normal tissues, with right-sided colons enriched with Clostridium spp and left-sided colons enriched with Akkermansia muciniphila and Bifidobacterium spp. We identified 94 tumor-enriched bacteria, and 38 were significantly associated with host hypermutation (HM) status. Previously known CRC-enriched bacteria, such as Fusobacterium groups and Campylobacter, were more prevalent in right-sided and HM tumors, and strongly correlated with mutations in host drivers and DNA damage repair genes. CRC driver genes that correlated with identified intratissue bacteria including CASP8, TP53 and SMAD2, with CASP8 significantly associated with multiple CRC-enriched taxa in all and in HM samples. Finally, risk scores derived from tumor or normal-resident taxa could both predict CRC prognosis and significantly improve the prognosis performance of the consensus molecular subtypes (CMS).
Conclusions
Our study provides new insights into the interactions between tumor-enriched microbiota with CRC and identifies potential bacteria markers that could improve the accuracy of CRC prognosis prediction. These findings can guide future efforts to exploit the performance of intratissue bacteria on CRC prognosis prediction.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
Uppsala University, Umea University, BGI-Shenzhen.
Funding
The Swedish Cancer Society, the Uppsala Cancer Foundation, the Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Human Disease Genomics, the Swedish Government (CancerUU), the Erling-Persson Foundation.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
528P - Progression risk after pregnancy in patients with glioma
Presenter: Annette Leibetseder
Session: Poster session 10
529P - Post-marketing surveillance data from patients ≥70 years of age with central nervous system malignancies treated with Tumor Treating Fields (TTFields) therapy between 2011–2022
Presenter: Wenyin Shi
Session: Poster session 10
530P - Ultra low bevacizumab (BEVULTRA-100) as a novel approach in symptomatic management of high grade glioma: Can minimal dose make a difference?
Presenter: P ANURADHA
Session: Poster session 10
531P - Tumor treating fields therapy for glioblastoma: Identifying needs and satisfaction of new and long-term users
Presenter: Eleni T. Batzianouli
Session: Poster session 10
532P - Nitric oxide is a target by a combo-drug for glioblastoma treatment
Presenter: Manish Tripathi
Session: Poster session 10
533P - Oligodendrogliomas: What is the impact after the introduction of the WHO molecular classification?
Presenter: Maria Angeles Vaz Salgado
Session: Poster session 10
534P - Glioblastoma treatment in patients older than 60 years: Hypofractionated radiotherapy and temozolomide versus conventional radiotherapy and temozolomide
Presenter: Teresa Pacheco
Session: Poster session 10
535P - Hypofractionated radiotherapy in fit elderly patients with glioblastoma: Relevant or detrimental?
Presenter: Carla Martín Abreu
Session: Poster session 10
536P - Safety and efficacy of silibinin in patients with brain metastases after stereotactic radiosurgery (SRS): The SUSTAIN trial
Presenter: Niccolò Bertini
Session: Poster session 10
537P - S100A9 serum levels are associated with survival prognosis in patients with brain metastases
Presenter: Ariane Steindl
Session: Poster session 10