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The role of intestinal flora on tumor immunotherapy: recent progress and treatment implications.


ABSTRACT: Immunotherapy, specifically immune checkpoint inhibitors, has emerged as a promising approach for treating malignant tumors. The gut, housing approximately 70 % of the body's immune cells, is abundantly populated with gut bacteria that actively interact with the host's immune system. Different bacterial species within the intestinal flora are in a delicate equilibrium and mutually regulate each other. However, when this balance is disrupted, pathogenic microorganisms can dominate, adversely affecting the host's metabolism and immunity, ultimately promoting the development of disease. Emerging researches highlight the potential of interventions such as fecal microflora transplantation (FMT) to improve antitumor immune response and reduce the toxicity of immunotherapy. These remarkable findings suggest the major role of intestinal flora in the development of cancer immunotherapy and led us to the hypothesis that intestinal flora transplantation may be a new breakthrough in modifying immunotherapy side effects.

SUBMITTER: Zhou Y 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10784319 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The role of intestinal flora on tumor immunotherapy: recent progress and treatment implications.

Zhou Yimin Y   Liu Xiangdong X   Gao Wei W   Luo Xin X   Lv Junying J   Wang Yunshan Y   Liu Duanrui D  

Heliyon 20231220 1


Immunotherapy, specifically immune checkpoint inhibitors, has emerged as a promising approach for treating malignant tumors. The gut, housing approximately 70 % of the body's immune cells, is abundantly populated with gut bacteria that actively interact with the host's immune system. Different bacterial species within the intestinal flora are in a delicate equilibrium and mutually regulate each other. However, when this balance is disrupted, pathogenic microorganisms can dominate, adversely affe  ...[more]

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