Thoracic Cancer (Apr 2024)

Association between oral microbiome and breast cancer in the east Asian population: A Mendelian randomization and case–control study

  • Kexin Feng,
  • Fei Ren,
  • Qingyao Shang,
  • Xin Wang,
  • Xiang Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/1759-7714.15280
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 12
pp. 974 – 986

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Background The causal relationship between breast cancer (BC) and the oral microbiome remains unclear. In this case–control study, using two‐sample Mendelian randomization (MR), we thoroughly explored the relationship between the oral microbiome and BC in the East Asian population. Methods Genetic summary data related to oral microbiota and BC were collected from genome‐wide association studies involving participants of East Asian descent. MR estimates were generated by conducting various analyses. Sequencing data from a case–control study were used to verify the validity of these findings. Results MR analysis revealed that 30 tongue and 37 salivary bacterial species were significantly associated with BC. Interestingly, in both tongue and salivary microbiomes, we observed the causal effect of six genera, namely, Aggregatibacter, Streptococcus, Prevotella, Haemophilus, Lachnospiraceae, Oribacterium, and Solobacterium, on BC. Our case–control study findings suggest differences in specific bacteria between patients with BC and healthy controls. Moreover, sequencing data confirmed the MR analysis results, demonstrating that compared with the healthy control group, the BC group had a higher relative abundance of Pasteurellaceae and Streptococcaceae but a lower relative abundance of Bacteroidaceae. Conclusions Our MR analysis suggests that the oral microbiome exerts a causative effect on BC risk, supported by the sequencing data of a case–control study. In the future, studies should be undertaken to comprehensively understand the complex interaction mechanisms between the oral microbiota and BC.

Keywords