Bile acid distributions, sex-specifcity, and prognosis in colorectal cancer

Oct 23, 2022·
Yuping Cai
,
Xinyi Shen
,
Lingeng Lu
Hong Yan
Hong Yan
,
Huang Huang
,
Patricia Gaule
,
Engjel Muca
,
Casey M. Theriot
,
Zahra Rattray
,
Nicholas J. W. Rattray
,
Jun Lu
,
Nita Ahuja
,
Yawei Zhang
,
Philip B. Paty
Sajid A. Khan
Sajid A. Khan
Caroline H. Johnson
Caroline H. Johnson
· 2 min read

Abstract

Background: Bile acids are known to be genotoxic and contribute to colorectal cancer (CRC). However, the link between CRC tumor bile acids to tumor location, patient sex, microbiome, immune-regulatory cells, and prognosis is not clear.

Methods: We conducted bile acid analysis using targeted liquid chromatography–mass spectrometry (LC–MS) on tumor tissues from CRC patients (n=228) with survival analysis. We performed quantitative immunofuorescence (QIF) on tumors to examine immune cells.

Results: Twelve of the bile acids were signifcantly higher in right-sided colon tumors compared to left-sided colon tumors. Furthermore, in male patients, right-sided colon tumors had elevated secondary bile acids (deoxycholic acid, lithocholic acid, ursodeoxycholic acid) compared to left-sided colon tumors, but this diference between tumors by location was not observed in females. A high ratio of glycoursodeoxycholic to ursodeoxycholic was associated with 5-year overall survival (HR=3.76, 95% CI=1.17 to 12.1, P=0.026), and a high ratio of glycochenodeoxycholic acid to chenodeoxycholic acid was associated with 5-year recurrence-free survival (HR=3.61, 95% CI=1.10 to 11.84, P=0.034). We also show correlation between these bile acids and FoxP3+T regulatory cells.

Conclusions: This study revealed that the distribution of bile acid abundances in colon cancer patients is tumor location-, age- and sex-specifc, and are linked to patient prognosis. This study provides new implications for targeting bile acid metabolism, microbiome, and immune responses for colon cancer patients by taking into account primary tumor location and sex.

Publication

Biology of Sex Diferences

Type

Journal Articles

Hong Yan
Authors
Research Assistant Professor
Sajid A. Khan
Authors
Sajid A. Khan
Associate Professor
Yale University
Caroline H. Johnson
Authors
Caroline H. Johnson
Associate Professor
Yale University