Effect of Nivolumab therapy on Metastatic Lung Cancer in Human Microbiome

Nivolumab, a type of immunotherapy, has enhanced the 5-year survival of patients with renal cell cancer, melanoma, and lung cancer which is now mechanistically understood. However, relatively sparse information assesses its relationship with shaping the gut microbiome. We aimed to assess the degree...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inbioRxiv
Main Authors Kubba, Rohan, Nguyen, Sonha, Borneman, James, Pai, Ramdas, Evans, Robert J
Format Paper
LanguageEnglish
Published Cold Spring Harbor Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press 04.01.2023
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Summary:Nivolumab, a type of immunotherapy, has enhanced the 5-year survival of patients with renal cell cancer, melanoma, and lung cancer which is now mechanistically understood. However, relatively sparse information assesses its relationship with shaping the gut microbiome. We aimed to assess the degree to which nivolumab treatment contributes to alterations in the species composition of the colon in lung cancer patients undergoing nivolumab treatment. Our pilot study utilized stool samples of five lung cancer patients at Inland Hematology Oncology (IHO) before administration of nivolumab and three months after initiation of treatment. 16S and ITS rRNA sequence analysis were used to assess alterations in species abundance and richness of the colon. After sequencing, statistical analysis, specifically a paired t-test, was performed to assess if any significant differences in any microbial species were observed before and after immunotherapy treatment. Although different proportions of microorganisms existed at baseline prior to treatment for each patient, a significant reduction in the Megasphaera elsdenii population was observed (p=.0488; n=4), when comparing before and after treatment. Our findings differ from that of Huang et. al (2022), who has recently posited that a positive association exists between Megasphaera elsdenii and the survival of patients with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinomas. Our conclusions suggest that different cancers may elicit differential effects on Megasphaera elsdenii in the gut microbiome.
DOI:10.1101/2023.01.03.522679