Gut microbiome influences efficacy of PD-1–based immunotherapy against epithelial tumors

Bertrand Routy(Université Paris-Sud), Emmanuelle Le Chatelier(Université Paris-Saclay), Lisa Derosa(Université Paris-Sud), Connie P.M. Duong(Inserm), Maryam Tidjani Alou(Université Paris-Sud), Romain Daillère(Université Paris-Sud), Aurélie Fluckiger(Inserm), Meriem Messaoudene(Inserm), Conrad Rauber(Université Paris-Sud), María Paula Roberti(Inserm), Marine Fidelle(Université Paris-Sud), Caroline Flament(Inserm), Vichnou Poirier-Colame(Inserm), Paule Opolon(Institut Gustave Roussy), Christophe Klein(Délégation Paris 5), Kristina Iribarren(Délégation Paris 5), Laura Mondragón(Délégation Paris 5), Nicolas Jacquelot(Université Paris-Sud), Bo Qu(Université Paris-Sud), Gladys Ferrere(Université Paris-Sud), Céline Clémenson(Inserm), Laura Mezquita(Institut Gustave Roussy), J. Remon Masip(Institut Gustave Roussy), Charles Naltet(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Solenn Brosseau(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), Courèche Kaderbhaï(Centre Georges François Leclerc), Corentin Richard(Centre Georges François Leclerc), Hira Rizvi(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Florence Levenez(Université Paris-Saclay), Nathalie Galleron(Université Paris-Saclay), Benoît Quinquis(Université Paris-Saclay), Nicolas Pons(Université Paris-Saclay), Bernhard Ryffel(Université d'Orléans), Véronique Minard-Colin(Institut Gustave Roussy), Patrick Gonin(Institut Gustave Roussy), Jean‐Charles Soria(Institut Gustave Roussy), Éric Deutsch(Inserm), Yohann Loriot(Université Paris-Sud), François Ghiringhelli(Centre Georges François Leclerc), Gérard Zalcman(Université Claude Bernard Lyon 1), François Goldwasser(Délégation Paris 5), Bernard Escudier(Inserm), Matthew D. Hellmann(Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center), Alexander Eggermont(Inserm), Didier Raoult(Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique), Laurence Albigès(Université Paris-Sud), Guido Kroemer(Délégation Paris 5), Laurence Zitvogel(Université Paris-Sud)
Science
November 2, 2017
Cited by 5,386

Abstract

Good bacteria help fight cancer Resident gut bacteria can affect patient responses to cancer immunotherapy (see the Perspective by Jobin). Routy et al. show that antibiotic consumption is associated with poor response to immunotherapeutic PD-1 blockade. They profiled samples from patients with lung and kidney cancers and found that nonresponding patients had low levels of the bacterium Akkermansia muciniphila . Oral supplementation of the bacteria to antibiotic-treated mice restored the response to immunotherapy. Matson et al. and Gopalakrishnan et al. studied melanoma patients receiving PD-1 blockade and found a greater abundance of “good” bacteria in the guts of responding patients. Nonresponders had an imbalance in gut flora composition, which correlated with impaired immune cell activity. Thus, maintaining healthy gut flora could help patients combat cancer. Science , this issue p. 91 , p. 104 , p. 97 ; see also p. 32


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