A faecal microbiota signature with high specificity for pancreatic cancer

  • Ece Kartal
  • , Thomas S.B. Schmidt
  • , Esther Molina-Montes
  • , Sandra Rodríguez-Perales
  • , Jakob Wirbel
  • , Oleksandr M. Maistrenko
  • , Wasiu A. Akanni
  • , Bilal Alashkar Alhamwe
  • , Renato J. Alves
  • , Alfredo Carrato
  • , Hans Peter Erasmus
  • , Lidia Estudillo
  • , Fabian Finkelmeier
  • , Anthony Fullam
  • , Anna M. Glazek
  • , Paulina Gómez-Rubio
  • , Rajna Hercog
  • , Ferris Jung
  • , Stefanie Kandels
  • , Stephan Kersting
  • Melanie Langheinrich, Mirari Márquez, Xavier Molero, Askarbek Orakov, Thea Van Rossum, Raul Torres-Ruiz, Anja Telzerow, Konrad Zych, Vladimir Benes, Georg Zeller, Jonel Trebicka, Francisco X. Real, Nuria Malats, Peer Bork

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Recent evidence suggests a role for the microbiome in pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) aetiology and progression. Objective To explore the faecal and salivary microbiota as potential diagnostic biomarkers. Methods We applied shotgun metagenomic and 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing to samples from a Spanish case-control study (n=136), including 57 cases, 50 controls, and 29 patients with chronic pancreatitis in the discovery phase, and from a German case-control study (n=76), in the validation phase. Results Faecal metagenomic classifiers performed much better than saliva-based classifiers and identified patients with PDAC with an accuracy of up to 0.84 area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC) based on a set of 27 microbial species, with consistent accuracy across early and late disease stages. Performance further improved to up to 0.94 AUROC when we combined our microbiome-based predictions with serum levels of carbohydrate antigen (CA) 19-9, the only current non-invasive, Food and Drug Administration approved, low specificity PDAC diagnostic biomarker. Furthermore, a microbiota-based classification model confined to PDAC-enriched species was highly disease-specific when validated against 25 publicly available metagenomic study populations for various health conditions (n=5792). Both microbiome-based models had a high prediction accuracy on a German validation population (n=76). Several faecal PDAC marker species were detectable in pancreatic tumour and non-tumour tissue using 16S rRNA sequencing and fluorescence in situ hybridisation. Conclusion Taken together, our results indicate that non-invasive, robust and specific faecal microbiota-based screening for the early detection of PDAC is feasible.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1359-1372
Number of pages14
JournalGut
Volume71
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

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