乳腺癌
UniFrac公司
优势比
内科学
肿瘤科
癌症
乳腺疾病
人口
医学
生物
遗传学
16S核糖体RNA
环境卫生
细菌
作者
Doratha A. Byrd,Emily Vogtmann,Zeni Wu,Yongli Han,Yunhu Wan,Joe‐Nat Clegg‐Lamptey,Joel Yarney,Beatrice Wiafe‐Addai,Seth Wiafe,Baffour Awuah,Daniel Ansong,Kofi Nyarko,Autumn G. Hullings,Xing Hua,Thomas U. Ahearn,James J. Goedert,Jianxin Shi,Rob Knight,Jonine D. Figueroa,Louise A. Brinton
摘要
The gut microbiota may play a role in breast cancer etiology by regulating hormonal, metabolic and immunologic pathways. We investigated associations of fecal bacteria with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease in a case-control study conducted in Ghana, a country with rising breast cancer incidence and mortality. To do this, we sequenced the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene to characterize bacteria in fecal samples collected at the time of breast biopsy (N = 379 breast cancer cases, N = 102 nonmalignant breast disease cases, N = 414 population-based controls). We estimated associations of alpha diversity (observed amplicon sequence variants [ASVs], Shannon index, and Faith's phylogenetic diversity), beta diversity (Bray-Curtis and unweighted/weighted UniFrac distance), and the presence and relative abundance of select taxa with breast cancer and nonmalignant breast disease using multivariable unconditional polytomous logistic regression. All alpha diversity metrics were strongly, inversely associated with odds of breast cancer and for those in the highest relative to lowest tertile of observed ASVs, the odds ratio (95% confidence interval) was 0.21 (0.13-0.36; P
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