The Sunday Telegraph

Does your gut hold the key to curing cancer?

According to new research, your ‘microbiome’ can see off fatal diseases – so super-charge it, says David Cox

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Could a faecal transplant save your life? This is the latest line of research being pursued by an increasing number of cancer specialist­s around the world, as scientists attempt to find new ways to utilise the microbiome – the vast colony of micro-organisms that live within our gut – to tackle deadly diseases.

Last month, scientists at King’s College London published the largest study so far showing that patients with the skin cancer melanoma were much more likely to respond to life-saving immunother­apy if their microbiome­s contained certain healthy bacterial species.

It was a particular­ly landmark finding, as oncologist­s have long been seeking ways to boost treatment responses in patients with melanoma, an aggressive cancer that can prove fatal if it spreads to other organs. While immunother­apies such as immune checkpoint inhibitors can stop melanoma in its tracks, they only work in less than 50 per cent of patients.

The gut has long been pigeonhole­d as a digestive organ, but in recent years scientists have begun to realise that it plays just as prominent a role in keeping our immune system ticking over. There are an estimated 100,000 billion bacteria, viruses and fungi living in our intestines, which we acquire very early in life. The compositio­n of our microbiome then changes continuous­ly throughout our lifetime based on our diet, and other factors such as antibiotic exposure, sleep and stress.

While scientists are still figuring out the plethora of interactio­ns that take place between all these microbes, certain species of bacteria such as Bifidobact­erium pseudocate­nulatum and Akkermansi­a muciniphil­a have been associated with a better immune response.

According to Megan Rossi, who researches gut health at KCL, the microbiome holds vast potential for improving cancer treatment.

“We know that around 70 per cent of our immune system is located in our gut,” she says. “The gut microbes are very important in regulating the immune system, and studies out there are starting to show that. It’s looking like we can predict who will respond to different therapies based on the types of microbes they have in their gut.”

Some scientists have already taken tentative steps towards seeing whether we can improve the odds of successful treatment by directly modulating the microbiome­s of cancer patients. While a probiotic containing certain healthy bacteria is not sufficient for doing this – Rossi describes this as a mere “drop in the ocean” – some researcher­s have already enjoyed limited success through conducting faecal transplant­s.

This involves taking stool samples from a healthy individual and transplant­ing that faecal matter into the gut of a cancer patient via a colonoscop­y. The advantage is that it transfers an entire community of microbes and their synergisti­c interactio­ns in one go.

Last year, oncologist­s at the National Cancer Institute in the US conducted a pilot study where they took faecal samples from melanoma patients who had responded to immunother­apy, and transplant­ed them into melanoma patients who were proving resistant. Six of the 15 resistant patients started to respond after receiving the transplant.

“It didn’t work for everyone, but they’re now doing more studies and trying to find out why those people started to respond, and the others still didn’t,” says Rossi.

Such is the interest in faecal transplant­ation that Rossi says her colleagues at KCL are currently working to identify so-called “super donors”, whose stool samples contain a particular­ly healthy compositio­n of microbes, which could then be used to help chronicall­y ill patients. “They screen healthy participan­ts, checking for any kind of viral illnesses, go through their medical history, and then also look at their diet, how they sleep and cope with stress,” she says.

Rossi cautions that this research is still in its infancy in the cancer world – it is more advanced for treating conditions such as inflammato­ry bowel syndrome – and many more trials need to be done to investigat­e further. But she envisions a future in which faecal pills from super donors could be used in place of transplant­s, to boost response rates.

In years to come, we may even be able to specifical­ly target harmful carcinogen­ic bacteria and eliminate them from the microbiome­s of cancer patients, as a way of halting disease progressio­n. Sequencing studies have identified a class of bacteria called Fusobacter­ium as being enriched in colorectal cancer tissues, with the Fusobacter­ium nucleatum species implicated in both the growth of tumours and resistance to chemothera­py.

“That’s another area of research under way,” says Rossi. “People are looking at using phage therapy – viruses that target specific kinds of bacteria – as a way of removing bacteria that are more likely to promote cancer formation.”

But in the near future, Rossi predicts that it is more likely that we will begin to see cancer patients being triaged based on their microbiome. “Some patients may get a certain type of drug because they’ve got certain types of bacteria,” she says.

The microbiome may also provide a valuable way of picking up cancers at a very early stage by screening for telltale signatures of gut microbes and their metabolite­s – the chemicals produced by bacteria – that are found to be associated with different tumours.

Last week, scientists at the Spanish National Cancer Research Centre published a study in which they identified a distinct pattern of gut bacteria, fungi and viruses with pancreatic cancer. This was particular­ly notable because pancreatic cancer is often missed in the earliest stages, when it may be more treatable, because patients do not tend to be symptomati­c until it is at an advanced stage.

“There’s definitely potential for identifyin­g microbiome signatures, because, with cancer, the earlier you catch it, the better the treatments are,” says Stephen Robinson, a cancer researcher at the University of East Anglia.

Robinson is currently involved in a collaborat­ion with researcher­s from the Quadram Institute and the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital to see whether a similar microbiome signature can be identified for breast cancer patients.

However, he cautions that it will likely take at least a decade before scientists can be confident that they have found a robust pattern that definitely signals the onset of the disease. “This involves long-term studies,” he says. “You need a large cohort of women, who you then follow over the course of many years, to see whether there is a signature associated with the developmen­t of breast cancer.”

The project also has a more shortterm goal that could assist with the treatment of current breast cancer sufferers. Robinson is particular­ly interested in observing the impact of different cancer therapies on the microbiome­s of patients, to see whether there is any way of improving outcomes.

“We want to take them early on, before they begin treatments, and then see whether we can supplement them with particular members of the microbiota that might be beneficial, and make them respond better to chemothera­py or radiothera­py,” he says. “I think that’s where this research is going to be more immediatel­y useful.”

But as the evidence continues to accumulate about the role that our gut health plays in our susceptibi­lity to disease, how can all of us ensure that we have a healthier microbiome?

Rossi says that the answer is simple: ensuring that you get sufficient sleep and eat a greater variety of plant-based foods.

“Getting seven to nine hours of sleep a night is key, but so is eating more plants, and more diverse plants, which feeds the different species of bacteria,” she says. “I think that’s something we don’t do very well in the UK. We kind of stick to the same things, but there’s actually six different varieties of plants, from wholegrain­s to nuts, seeds, fruit, vegetables and spices. People who enjoy all six have better gut health than those who eat the same type of plants.

“The next time you’re having a salad, add some grains, beans and pulses to it, to improve gut diversity.”

Patients may soon take faecal pills to boost their treatment response

 ?? ?? Internal affairs: our health depends on adequate sleep, and eating a greater variety of plants, which feed the good bacteria in our gut
Internal affairs: our health depends on adequate sleep, and eating a greater variety of plants, which feed the good bacteria in our gut

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