Prevalence of genotoxic bacteria in men undergoing biopsy for prostate cancer

Author:

Lee John1ORCID,Wickes Brian L.2,Fu Jianmin2,Brockman Nohelli E.2,Garg Harshit1,Jobin Christian3,Johson‐Pais Teresa1,Leach Robin4,Lai Zhao5,Liss Michael A.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Urology University of Texas Health San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

2. Department of Microbiology, Immunology, and Molecular Genetics University of Texas Health San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

3. Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition University of Florida College of Medicine Gainesville Florida USA

4. Department of Cell and Systems Biology University of Texas Health San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

5. Department of Molecular Medicine University of Texas Health San Antonio San Antonio Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundNew evidence suggests that bacteria‐produced DNA toxins may have a role in the development or progression of prostate cancer. To determine the prevalence of these genes in a noninfection (i.e., colonized) state, we screened urine specimens in men before undergoing a biopsy for prostate cancer detection.MethodsWe developed a multiplex polymerase chain reaction using three of the most described bacterial genotoxin gene primers: Colibactin (polyketone synthase [pks] gene island: clbN and clbB), cytotoxic necrotizing factor (cnf1) toxin, and cytolethal distending toxin B (cdtB) represented gene islands. After calibration on Escherichia coli samples of known genotypes, we used a training and validation cohort. We performed multiplex testing on a training cohort of previously collected urine from 45 men undergoing prostate biopsy. For the validation cohort, we utilized baseline urine samples from a previous randomized clinical trial (n = 263) with known prostate cancer outcomes.ResultsThe prevalence of four common bacterial genotoxin genes detected in the urine before prostate biopsy for prostate cancer is 8% (25/311). The prevalence of pks island (clbN and clbB), cnf1, and cdt toxin genes are 6.1%, 2.4%, and 1.7%, respectively. We found no association between urinary genotoxins and prostate cancer (p = 0.83). We did identify a higher proportion of low‐grade cancer (92% vs. 44%) in those men positive for urinary genotoxin and higher‐grade cancer in those genotoxin negative (8% vs. 56%, p = 0.001).ConclusionsThe prevalence of urinary genotoxins is low and does not correspond to a prostate cancer diagnosis. The urine was taken at one point in time and does not rule out the possibility of previous exposure.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Urology,Oncology

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