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The Human Microbiomes in Pancreatic Cancer: Towards Evidence-Based Manipulation Strategies?

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Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22189914

Keywords

pancreatic cancer; microbiome; immuno-oncology; tumor-targeting bacteria

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Recent evidence suggests that microorganisms play a significant role in modulating responses to anticancer treatments and reshaping the tumor-immune microenvironment. Gut microbiota and intra-tumoral bacteria are recognized as crucial components in cancer development and treatment responses. These elements are likely to become important for early diagnosis and risk stratification in the future.
Recent pieces of evidence have emerged on the relevance of microorganisms in modulating responses to anticancer treatments and reshaping the tumor-immune microenvironment. On the one hand, many studies have addressed the role of the gut microbiota, providing interesting correlative findings with respect to etiopathogenesis and treatment responses. On the other hand, intra-tumoral bacteria are being recognized as intrinsic and essential components of the cancer microenvironment, able to promote a plethora of tumor-related aspects from cancer growth to resistance to chemotherapy. These elements will be probably more and more valuable in the coming years in early diagnosis and risk stratification. Furthermore, microbial-targeted intervention strategies may be used as adjuvants to current therapies to improve therapeutic responses and overall survival. This review focuses on new insights and therapeutic approaches that are dawning against pancreatic cancer: a neoplasm that arises in a central metabolic hub interfaced between the gut and the host.

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