Cell & Bioscience (Dec 2022)

A novel promising diagnosis model for colorectal advanced adenoma and carcinoma based on the progressive gut microbiota gene biomarkers

  • Junfeng Xu,
  • Zhijun Zheng,
  • Lang Yang,
  • Ruoran Li,
  • Xianzong Ma,
  • Jie Zhang,
  • Fumei Yin,
  • Lin Liu,
  • Qian Xu,
  • Qiujing Shen,
  • Xiuping Shen,
  • Chunyan Wu,
  • Jing Liu,
  • Nan Qin,
  • Jianqiu Sheng,
  • Peng Jin

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13578-022-00940-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Background Colorectal cancer (CRC), a commonly diagnosed cancer often develops slowly from benign polyps called adenoma to carcinoma. Altered gut microbiota is implicated in colorectal carcinogenesis. It is warranted to find non-invasive progressive microbiota biomarkers that can reflect the dynamic changes of the disease. This study aimed to identify and evaluate potential progressive fecal microbiota gene markers for diagnosing advanced adenoma (AA) and CRC. Results Metagenome-wide association was performed on fecal samples from different cohorts of 871 subjects (247 CRC, 234 AA, and 390 controls). We characterized the gut microbiome, identified microbiota markers, and further constructed a colorectal neoplasms classifier in 99 CRC, 94 AA, and 62 controls, and validated the results in 185 CRC, 140 AA, and 291 controls from 3 independent cohorts. 21 species and 277 gene markers were identified whose abundance was significantly increased or decreased from normal to AA and CRC. The progressive gene markers were distributed in metabolic pathways including amino acid and sulfur metabolism. A diagnosis model consisting of four effect indexes was constructed based on the markers, the sensitivities of the Adenoma Effect Index 1 for AA, Adenoma Effect Index 2 for high-grade dysplasia (HGD) adenoma were 71.3% and 76.5%, the specificities were 90.5% and 90.3%, respectively. CRC Effect Index 1 for all stages of CRC and CRC Effect Index 2 for stage III–IV CRC to predict CRC yielded an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.839 (95% CI 0.804–0.873) and 0.857 (95% CI 0.793–0.921), respectively. Combining with fecal immunochemical test (FIT) significantly improved the sensitivity of CRC Effect Index 1 and CRC Effect Index 2 to 96.7% and 100%. Conclusions This study reports the successful diagnosis model establishment and cross-region validation for colorectal advanced adenoma and carcinoma based on the progressive gut microbiota gene markers. The results suggested that the novel diagnosis model can significantly improve the diagnostic performance for advanced adenoma.

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