The New Zealand Herald

NZ find ‘game changer’ for bowel cancer

Kiwi scientists say bug identifica­tion step toward creating vaccine or detection test

- Ben Leahy

Kiwi scientists believe they have identified a toxic bug that causes bowel cancer — a discovery that could lead to the developmen­t of a life-saving vaccine or early detection test.

The University of Otago researcher­s found a toxic form of bacteria, Bacteroide­s fragilis, existed in the gut of almost 80 per cent of people with a cancerous lesion, known to be a precursor to the disease.

B. fragilis is a common bug in our gut, and mostly helps with digestion and the general health of the colon.

However, in some people it produces a toxin that disrupts the cells lining the gut and starts the process of cancer in the bowel.

Research head and bowel cancer surgeon, Professor Frank Frizelle, described the finding as a “gamechange­r”.

“It gives us a clue as to what is actually driving the cancer, and in doing so, it gives us a possible means of being able to manage it,” he said.

More than 1300 New Zealanders die of bowel cancer every year.

The disease is becoming increasing­ly common in people under the age of 50, which could be due to changes in our diet, the researcher­s said.

Diet has a direct influence on our gut health, and the micro organisms living there.

To make their findings, the researcher­s undertook a world first study tracking the progress of 150 people who had undergone a colonoscop­y.

They geneticall­y analysed the DNA from bowel samples taken during the colonoscop­ies to see if B. fragilis was present.

Between 12 and 15 years after their initial colonoscop­y, 79 per cent of patients with the toxic B. fragilis in their gut had developed low grade dysplasia, a type of pre-cancer.

With further time and money, the discovery could be used to screen for people with the bug, and it could be used to develop a lifesaving vaccine, the research team said.

Frizelle said his team wanted to further study the bug in the hope it can identify people with the highest risk of developing bowel cancer.

“The earlier you can catch a disease, the better the prognosis,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand