Antibiotic therapy and outcome from immune-checkpoint inhibitors

David J. Pinato, Daria Gramenitskaya, Daniel M. Altmann, Rosemary J. Boyton, Benjamin H. Mullish, Julian R. Marchesi, Mark Bower

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo su rivistaArticolo di reviewpeer review

Abstract

Sensitivity to immune checkpoint inhibitor (ICPI) therapy is governed by a complex interplay of tumor and host-related determinants. Epidemiological studies have highlighted that exposure to antibiotic therapy influences the probability of response to ICPI and predict for shorter patient survival across malignancies. Whilst a number of studies have reproducibly documented the detrimental effect of broad-spectrum antibiotics, the immune-biologic mechanisms underlying the association with outcome are poorly understood. Perturbation of the gut microbiota, an increasingly well-characterized factor capable of influencing ICPI-mediated immune reconstitution, has been indicated as a putative mechanism to explain the adverse effects attributed to antibiotic exposure in the context of ICPI therapy. Prospective studies are required to validate antibiotic-mediated gut perturbations as a mechanism of ICPI refractoriness and guide the development of strategies to overcome this barrier to an effective delivery of anti-cancer immunotherapy.

Lingua originaleInglese
Numero di articolo287
RivistaJournal for ImmunoTherapy of Cancer
Volume7
Numero di pubblicazione1
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 6 nov 2019
Pubblicato esternamente

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