4.5 Review

The impact of pelvic radiotherapy on the gut microbiome and its role in radiation-induced diarrhoea: a systematic review

Journal

RADIATION ONCOLOGY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13014-021-01899-y

Keywords

Radiotherapy; Gastrointestinal microbiome; Diarrhoea; Systematic review

Funding

  1. Natural Science Foundation of China Regional Science Foundation Project [82060553]
  2. Talent Innovation and Venture Project of Lanzhou City [2017-RC-23]
  3. Hospital Fund Project of the First Hospital of Lanzhou University [ldyyyn2018-09]
  4. Lanzhou Science and Technology Development Guiding Project [2019-ZD-45]

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Pelvic radiotherapy is a key treatment for pelvic malignancies, leading to radiation enteritis and diarrhoea as common symptoms. Studies have shown a decrease in gut microbiome diversity after pelvic radiotherapy, especially in patients experiencing diarrhoea. Community composition of gut microbiota changes at different time points during and after radiotherapy, and differences in gut microbiota composition before radiotherapy have been observed between patients with and without diarrhoea.
Pelvic radiotherapy is the key treatment for pelvic malignancies, usually including pelvic primary tumour lesions and lymphatic drainage areas in the pelvic region. Therefore, the intestinal tract in the radiation field is inevitably damaged, a phenomenon clinically referred to as radiation enteritis, and diarrhoea is the most common clinical symptom of radiation enteritis. Therefore, it is necessary to study the mechanism of radiation-induced diarrhoea. It has been found that the gut microbiome plays an important role in the development of diarrhoea in response to pelvic radiotherapy, and the species and distribution of intestinal microbiota are significantly altered in patients after pelvic radiotherapy. In this study, we searched for articles indexed in the Cochrane Library, Web of Science, EMBASE and PubMed databases in English and CNKI, Wanfang data and SINOMED in Chinese from their inception dates through 13 March 2020 to collect studies on the gut microbiome in pelvic radiotherapy patients. Eventually, we included eight studies: one study report on prostatic carcinoma, five studies on gynaecological carcinoma and two papers on pelvic carcinomas. All studies were designed as self-controlled studies, except for one that compared toxicity to nontoxicity. The results from all the studies showed that the diversity of intestinal flora decreased during and after pelvic radiotherapy, and the diversity of intestinal flora decreased significantly in patients with diarrhoea after radiotherapy. Five studies observed that the community composition of the gut microbiota changed at the phylum, order or genus level before, during, and after pelvic radiotherapy at different time points. In addition, the composition of the gut microbiota before radiotherapy was different between patients with postradiotherapy diarrhoea and those without diarrhoea in five studies. However, relevant studies have not reached consistent results regarding the changes in microbiota composition. Changes in the intestinal flora induced by pelvic radiotherapy and their relationship between changes in intestinal flora and the occurrence of radiation-induced diarrhoea (RID) are discussed in this study, providing a theoretical basis for the causes of RID after pelvic radiotherapy.

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