作者
Lisa Derosa,Valerio Iebba,Carolina Alves Costa Silva,Gianmarco Piccinno,Guojun Wu,Leonardo Lordello,Bertrand Routy,Naisi Zhao,Cassandra Thelemaque,Roxanne Birebent,Federica Marmorino,Marine Fidelle,Meriem Messaoudene,Andrew Maltez Thomas,Gérard Zalcman,S. Friard,Julien Mazières,Clarisse Audigier-Valette,Denis Moro‐Sibilot,François Goldwasser,Arnaud Scherpereel,Hervé Pegliasco,François Ghiringhelli,Nicole Bouchard,Cissé Sow,Ines Darik,Silvia Zoppi,Pierre Ly,Anna Reni,Romain Daillère,Éric Deutsch,Karla A. Lee,Laura A. Bolte,Johannes R. Björk,Rinse K. Weersma,Fabrice Barlési,L. C. Padilha,Ana Finzel,Morten L. Isaksen,Bernard Escudier,Laurence Albigès,David Planchard,Fabrice André,Chiara Cremolini,Stéphanie Martinez,Benjamin Besse,Liping Zhao,Nicola Segata,Jérôme Wojcik,Oliver Kepp,Laurence Zitvogel
摘要
The gut microbiota influences the clinical responses of cancer patients to immunecheckpoint inhibitors (ICIs). However, there is no consensus definition of detrimental dysbiosis. Based on metagenomics (MG) sequencing of 245 non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) patient feces, we constructed species-level co-abundance networks that were clustered into species-interacting groups (SIGs) correlating with overall survival. Thirty-seven and forty-five MG species (MGSs) were associated with resistance (SIG1) and response (SIG2) to ICIs, respectively. When combined with the quantification of Akkermansia species, this procedure allowed a person-based calculation of a topological score (TOPOSCORE) that was validated in an additional 254 NSCLC patients and in 216 genitourinary cancer patients. Finally, this TOPOSCORE was translated into a 21-bacterial probe set-based qPCR scoring that was validated in a prospective cohort of NSCLC patients as well as in colorectal and melanoma patients. This approach could represent a dynamic diagnosis tool for intestinal dysbiosis to guide personalized microbiota-centered interventions.