Taking antibiotic drugs
may raise the risk of developing colon cancer five to 10 years down the line,
according to a new study of more than 40,000 cancer cases in Sweden.
Past studies hinted that antibiotics can cause lasting
changes to the gut microbiome — the community of microbes that live in the
digestive tract — and that these changes may be linked to a heightened risk
of colon cancer.
Now, in the largest epidemiological study to ever explore this link,
researchers report that the heightened risk may be specific to cancers in the
so-called proximal colon, the part of the colon that connects to the
small intestine and
starts in the lower-right abdomen.
"It's very clear,
when we looked at the data, that it's very confined to the proximal, or
right-sided colon," senior author Sophia Harlid, a cancer researcher at
Umeå University in Sweden, told Live Science. And in fact, the
antibiotic-related cancer risk was greatest at the start of the proximal colon,
called the "ascending colon," which extends from the lower- to upper-right
abdomen.
People who took antibiotics for more than six months bore the
highest cancer risk, according to the research, published Wednesday (Sept. 1)
in the Journal of the National
Cancer Institute. Compared with people who'd taken no antibiotics,
these individuals had a 17% higher chance of developing cancer in the ascending
colon.
That said, even short courses of antibiotics carried an
associated cancer risk, albeit a far smaller one than what was seen with the months-long
regimens, the team found. This data may provide yet another reason to rein in
the overprescription of antibiotics, besides preventing the emergence of antibiotic-resistant
superbugs, Harlid said.
These new findings echo the results of a similar, but smaller,
U.K.-based study, published in 2019 in the journal Gut. The Swedish study "came right in line with
other data that was emerging … which actually improves confidence that there's
an association," Dr. Cynthia Sears, senior author of the U.K. study, who
was not involved in the newest research, told Live Science.
It's important to note
that these studies only identify a correlation; they don't show that
antibiotics directly cause the subsequent colon cancer, said Sears, who is a
professor of medicine and oncology at the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine and a professor of molecular microbiology and immunology at the
Bloomberg School of Public Health. That said, there are theories as to how the
drugs may make the proximal gut more vulnerable to cancer growth.
"Our thinking is that you're disrupting the balance of the
microbiota," and this may allow infectious bugs like Escherichia coli and Klebsiella
pneumoniae to gain
prominence where they'd usually be outcompeted by other microbes, Sears said.
This in turn may ramp up inflammation in
the colon, generating reactive chemicals that could damage DNA and generate
tumors. In addition, the inner lining of the intestine may then become more
permeable, allowing bacteria to infiltrate the colon walls and join together in
slimy structures called biofilms. Studies suggest that almost all proximal
colon cancers — nearly 90% — are associated with such biofilms, Sears said.
The proximal colon may
be particularly vulnerable to these changes because it endures the greatest
spillover of antibiotic drugs from the small intestine, Sears said. Then, as
the drugs move through the colon, their molecules steadily break down. That
said, these potential mechanisms still need to be studied further, but for now,
the new study strengthens the case that some link exists between antibiotics
and colon cancer, she said.
The new study used
data from the Swedish Colorectal Cancer Registry to identify tens of thousands
of colorectal cancer patients who had been diagnosed between 2010 and 2016.
Data from the Swedish Prescribed Drug Register allowed the team to track these
patients' antibiotic use between 2005 to 2016, to see if any patterns emerged.
They also compared the cancer patients to more than 200,000 cancer-free people
from the wider Swedish population.
While the team
uncovered a clear link between antibiotics use and cancer in the ascending
colon, they found no such link to cancers in any part of the distal colon or
rectum.
The team wanted to pin
down why the drugs might drive cancer in the proximal colon. To do so, they
searched the prescribed drug register for methenamine hippurate — a medicine
that helps prevent urinary tract infections in people who get them
frequently.
Although it has
antibacterial effects, the drug doesn't alter the gut microbiome because it can
only be activated by the high acidity of urine, Harlid explained. So based on
the theory that antibiotics raise the risk of cancer by messing with gut bugs,
methenamine hippurate should not be linked to the same increased risk. And in
sifting through all their data, the team found that this was the case: only
antibiotics that affect gut bugs, not methenamine hippurate, showed a link to
colon cancer.
These results further
support the antibiotics-cancer link, but the study still has its limitations.
For instance, the datasets didn't include any information on individuals' diets,
smoking habits or alcohol use, all of which can also raise the risk of colon
cancer. Similarly, the authors could not determine which patients might be
taking antibiotics for an underlying condition like inflammatory bowel disease,
also linked to colon cancer. In addition, the Swedish Prescribed Drug Register
provides information on drug prescriptions, but cannot reflect whether
individuals finished their complete course of antibiotics, for instance.
But because the study
is so large, it "definitely hints in the right direction," Harlid
said.
In a few years time, the team hopes to perform an even larger
follow-up study, when more data has accumulated, and they're interested in
seeing whether specific colon cancer subtypes show a stronger association with
antibiotics. Cancers can be split into subtypes based on the behavior of their
tumor cells and what genetic mutations they carry, and these subtle differences
affect where the cancer grows and how it responds to treatments, according to the National
Cancer Institute.
Meanwhile, Sears and
her colleagues are currently collecting data on the microbiomes of individuals
with early-stage colon cancer, to pinpoint specific gut bugs that are unusually
depleted or overgrown. As scientists continue to study why microbes make a
difference in colon cancer, for now, doctors should be selective in when and
how they prescribe antibiotics, Sears said.
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