Affiliation:
1. Oncology Department III, Shanghai Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional
Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, 200071, China
2. Department of Central Laboratory Medicine, Shanghai Municipal Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Shanghai, 200071, China
Abstract
Background:
Colorectal Cancer (CRC) is one of the top three malignancies with the highest incidence
and mortality.
Objective:
The study aimed to identify the effect of Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) on postoperative
patients with stage II-III CRC and explore the core herb combination and its mechanism.
Methods:
An observational cohort study was conducted on patients diagnosed with stage II-III CRC from
January 2016 to January 2021. The primary outcome was disease-free survival, which was compared between
the patients who received TCM or not, and the secondary outcome was the hazard ratio. The relevance principle
was used to obtain the candidate herb combinations, and the core combination was evaluated through an
assessment of efficacy and representativeness. Then, biological processes and signaling pathways associated
with CRC were obtained by Gene Ontology function, Kyoto Encyclopedia of Gene and Genomes pathway,
and Wikipathway. Furthermore, hub genes were screened by the Kaplan-Meier estimator, and molecular
docking was employed to predict the binding sites of key ingredients to hub genes. The correlation analysis
was employed for the correlations between the hub genes and tumor-infiltrating immune cells and hypoxiarelated
genes. Ultimately, a quantitative polymerase chain reaction was performed to verify the regulation of
hub genes by their major ingredients.
Results:
A total of 707 patients were included. TCM could decrease the metastatic recurrence associated with
stage II-III CRC (HR: 0.61, log-rank P < 0.05). Among those patients in the TCM group, the core combination
was Baizhu → Yinchen, Chenpi, and Fuling (C combination), and its antitumor mechanism was most
likely related to the regulation of BCL2L1, XIAP, and TOP1 by its key ingredients, quercetin and tangeretin.
The expression of these genes was significantly correlated with both tumor-infiltrating immune cells and hypoxia-
related genes. In addition, quercetin and tangeretin down-regulated the mRNA levels of BCL2L1, XIAP,
and TOP1, thereby inhibiting the growth of HCT116 cells.
Conclusion:
Overall, a combination of four herbs, Baizhu → Yinchen, Chenpi, and Fuling, could reduce metastatic
recurrence in postoperative patients with stage II-III CRC. The mechanism may be related to the regulation
of BCL2L1, XIAP, and TOP1 by its key ingredients quercetin and tangeretin.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.