作者
Yamato Takabe,Emily Allen,Lyla Allen,Ryan McCarthy,Ayanna Varma,Madeline Bace,Priyanka Sharma,Carlie Porter,Li Yan,Rongrong Wu,Rene J. Bouchard,Sai Yendamuri
摘要
Abstract
Introduction
The microbiome is known to play a significant role in cancer biology; however, few studies have elucidated its relationship with Nonsmall Cell Lung Cancer (NSCLC) patient outcomes. We hypothesized that there are specific microorganisms that are closely related with NSCLC patient survival. Methods
Total of 647 NSCLC (Adenocarcinoma and Squamous Cell Carcinoma combined) patients in The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) were analyzed using the R software. Results
A Volcano Plot was analyzed with the patients divided into Short and Long Survivors by overall survival of 0.9 years, and we found that a bacterium Rothia was significantly abundant in Short Survivors, and Blastococcus, Leptospira, and Haematobacter in Long Survivors, but presence of Rothia alone was associated with overall survival. The age, race, subtype, and sex were not significantly different by the presence of Rothia in NSCLC. Unexpectedly, Rothia-positive NSCLC was associated with less cell proliferation by gene set enrichment analysis, Mki67 expression, proliferation score, with less fraction altered and homologous recombination deficiency, and with high infiltration of stromal cells, indicating favorable oncological characteristics. Further, Rothia-positive tumors were associated with significantly higher infiltration of CD8 T cells, CD4 T cells, Monocytes, and NK cells, and high interferon-gamma response, T-cell receptor richness, cytolytic activity, indicating favorable tumor immune microenvironment. Conclusions
NSCLC with Rothia was associated with worse survival but also with favorable oncological characteristics such as less cell proliferation and favorable tumor immune microenvironment. We cannot help but speculate that Rothia in NSCLC is associated with mortality unrelated to oncological characteristics.