Exploring the Intestinal Microbiota Profile in Prostate Cancer Patients and Healthy Controls
2025
Giovanna Cocomazzi | Annacandida Villani | Gandino Mencarelli | Viviana Contu | Daniele De Ruvo | Edy Virgili | Francesco Marino | Giorgio Maria Baldini | Elena Binda | Lodovico Parmegiani | Walter Ciampaglia | Lorenzo Capone | Francesco Perri | Antonio Cisternino | Valerio Pazienza | Concetta Panebianco
Recent studies suggest a role for the gut microbiota in the onset, progression, and prognosis of prostate cancer (PCa), one of the most common neoplasms in males. PCa screening relies on PSA testing, whose usefulness remains controversial due to its low specificity. This study was aimed at investigating the differences in the gut microbiota of PCa patients and healthy controls (HCs) and finding correlations between gut microbes and the clinical laboratory parameter assessed in the evaluation of PCa, to identify bacteria which could be used as diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers. Fecal samples collected from 18 PCa patients and 18 HCs were used to isolate bacterial DNA. 16S rRNA gene sequencing provided the gut microbial profiles of the enrolled subjects, whose functional impact was also predicted. A recursive partitioning tree method allowed us to identify a bacterial signature discriminating PCa from HC. A correlation analysis was performed between gut bacteria and the clinical laboratory parameters assessed in the evaluation of PCa. Differential bacterial patterns emerged between PCa patients and HCs, together with significant differences in beta-diversity, alpha-diversity, and richness. The functional prediction of the microbial profiles revealed several metabolic processes differentially regulated, including an enrichment in the Krebs cycle and in steroid hormone synthesis in PCa patients. A bacterial signature based on the abundance of Lactobacillus and Collinsella was found to discriminate between the two groups. Significant correlations were found between gut bacteria and the clinical laboratory parameters generally assessed in the evaluation of PCa. These results indicate that gut microbiota profiles may, in the future, represent potential biomarkers associated with prostate cancer risk or progression: however, further prospective studies and clinical validation are needed before considering their use as diagnostic or prognostic tools.
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