Human microbiota: A crucial gatekeeper in lung cancer initiation, progression, and treatment

Lung cancer is becoming one of the most detrimental cancers with the highest morbidity and mortality rate of all cancers, posing a significant burden for the global health system. Nonetheless, the therapeutic efficacy of traditional lung cancer therapies still remains relatively unsatisfying with va...

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Veröffentlicht in:Medicine in microecology 2022-09, Vol.13, p.100055, Article 100055
Hauptverfasser: Zhou, Yuqing, Chen, Tingtao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Lung cancer is becoming one of the most detrimental cancers with the highest morbidity and mortality rate of all cancers, posing a significant burden for the global health system. Nonetheless, the therapeutic efficacy of traditional lung cancer therapies still remains relatively unsatisfying with varied responsiveness and unexpected adverse effects. Fortunately, studies have reported that an intimate relationship might exist between microbiota and lung carcinoma. Notably, microbial dysbiosis might result in changes in the metabolism, induction of immunosuppression, and recruitment of inflammatory factors, thereby driving lung carcinogenesis. Certain microbial strains were identified to be specifically enriched in the lung tumor beds, indicating their predictive role in lung cancer. Furthermore, the particular microbial composition was also proved to potentiate the outcomes of lung cancer therapies, suggesting that lung and gut microbiome were promising to be clinically applied for lung cancer therapy. In this review, we will comprehensively summarize the recent findings on how microbes mediate the initiation, progression, and treatment of lung cancer, illustrating the potential mechanisms and probing into the putative manipulation of microbiota to facilitate lung cancer treatments. [Display omitted] •Lung cancer has posed significantly burden for the global health system.•Human microbiota is reported to play a pivotal role in lung cancer initiation and progression.•The therapeutic effectiveness of lung malignancies can be largely intervened bymicrobial compositional change.•λ Microorganisms are promising to be predictive biomarkers for lung cancer diagnosis, treatment, and prognosis in clinics.
ISSN:2590-0978
2590-0978
DOI:10.1016/j.medmic.2022.100055