People who develop precancerous colon polyps have significant differences in the type and diversity of bacteria in their gut flora compared to healthy people, a new study published in the US has found. UEG Week 2023European Union Annual Conference of Gastroenterology.

These changes can be detected before polyps turn into colorectal cancer, the first author says. Dr. Ranko Gaseza, researcher and professor at the University Medical Center in Groningen, the Netherlands. “If confirmed, these findings would indicate that examining the gut microbiome could improve current non-invasive fecal tests used to detect and prevent colorectal polyps and cancer. I mean,” he says.

How does this study build on previous research?

Previous research has found that certain strains of bacteria and the compounds they make in the gut are associated with a higher or lower risk of colorectal cancer. American Cancer Institute. However, it is not fully understood which comes first: whether microbiome changes change the course of cancer, or whether microbiome changes occur as a result of cancer.

Lower intestinal diversity associated with precancerous polyps

To investigate the association between different bacteria found in the gut and precancerous colon polyps, researchers compared data from more than 8,000 participants in the Dutch Microbiome Project with a national pathology database in the Netherlands. We linked and identified all cases of colon biopsy recorded over the past 50 years.

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