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Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas

The possible role of the altered intestinal microbiome in the development of malignancies has been raised recently in several publications. Among external factors, antibiotics are considered to be the most important agent capable of producing dysbiosis in the gut flora, either temporally or permanen...

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Autores principales: Ternák, Gábor, Berényi, Károly, Sümegi, András, Szenczi, Ágnes, Fodor, Barbara, Németh, Balázs, Kiss, István
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7601152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32993020
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9100643
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author Ternák, Gábor
Berényi, Károly
Sümegi, András
Szenczi, Ágnes
Fodor, Barbara
Németh, Balázs
Kiss, István
author_facet Ternák, Gábor
Berényi, Károly
Sümegi, András
Szenczi, Ágnes
Fodor, Barbara
Németh, Balázs
Kiss, István
author_sort Ternák, Gábor
collection PubMed
description The possible role of the altered intestinal microbiome in the development of malignancies has been raised recently in several publications. Among external factors, antibiotics are considered to be the most important agent capable of producing dysbiosis in the gut flora, either temporally or permanently. The human microbiome has several beneficial effects in terms of maintaining appropriate human health, but its alteration has been implicated in the development of many illnesses. Our basic aim was to explore a possible relationship between the consumption of different antibiotic classes and the incidence of the most common cancer types (male, female) in European countries. A database of the average, yearly antibiotic consumption (1997–2018) has been developed and the consumption figures were compared to the eight, most frequent cancer incidence calculated for 2018 in 30 European countries. Pearson correlation has indicated different degrees of positive (supportive) and negative (inhibitor) significant associations between antibiotic consumption figures and cancer prevalence. It has been observed that certain antibiotic classes with positive correlation probably augment the incidence of certain cancer types, while others, with negative correlation, may show some inhibitory effect. The relatively higher or lower consumption pattern of different classes of antibiotics could be related to certain cancer prevalence figures in different European countries. Our results indicated that countries with relatively high consumption of narrow-spectrum penicillin (J01CE, J01CF) and tetracycline (J01A), like certain Scandinavian countries, showed a higher incidence of female colorectal cancer, female lung cancer, melanoma, breast, prostate and uterus corpus cancer. Countries with relatively higher consumption of broad-spectrum penicillin (J01CA, J01CR) and some broad-spectrum antibiotics (J01D, J01F, J01M), like Greece, Hungary, Slovakia, France, etc. showed a higher incidence rate of male lung cancer and male bladder cancer. The higher incidence rate of different cancer types showed association with the higher consumption of antibiotics with “augmenting” properties and with less consumption of antibiotics with “inhibitory” properties.
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spelling pubmed-76011522020-11-01 Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas Ternák, Gábor Berényi, Károly Sümegi, András Szenczi, Ágnes Fodor, Barbara Németh, Balázs Kiss, István Antibiotics (Basel) Article The possible role of the altered intestinal microbiome in the development of malignancies has been raised recently in several publications. Among external factors, antibiotics are considered to be the most important agent capable of producing dysbiosis in the gut flora, either temporally or permanently. The human microbiome has several beneficial effects in terms of maintaining appropriate human health, but its alteration has been implicated in the development of many illnesses. Our basic aim was to explore a possible relationship between the consumption of different antibiotic classes and the incidence of the most common cancer types (male, female) in European countries. A database of the average, yearly antibiotic consumption (1997–2018) has been developed and the consumption figures were compared to the eight, most frequent cancer incidence calculated for 2018 in 30 European countries. Pearson correlation has indicated different degrees of positive (supportive) and negative (inhibitor) significant associations between antibiotic consumption figures and cancer prevalence. It has been observed that certain antibiotic classes with positive correlation probably augment the incidence of certain cancer types, while others, with negative correlation, may show some inhibitory effect. The relatively higher or lower consumption pattern of different classes of antibiotics could be related to certain cancer prevalence figures in different European countries. Our results indicated that countries with relatively high consumption of narrow-spectrum penicillin (J01CE, J01CF) and tetracycline (J01A), like certain Scandinavian countries, showed a higher incidence of female colorectal cancer, female lung cancer, melanoma, breast, prostate and uterus corpus cancer. Countries with relatively higher consumption of broad-spectrum penicillin (J01CA, J01CR) and some broad-spectrum antibiotics (J01D, J01F, J01M), like Greece, Hungary, Slovakia, France, etc. showed a higher incidence rate of male lung cancer and male bladder cancer. The higher incidence rate of different cancer types showed association with the higher consumption of antibiotics with “augmenting” properties and with less consumption of antibiotics with “inhibitory” properties. MDPI 2020-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7601152/ /pubmed/32993020 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9100643 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ternák, Gábor
Berényi, Károly
Sümegi, András
Szenczi, Ágnes
Fodor, Barbara
Németh, Balázs
Kiss, István
Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title_full Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title_fullStr Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title_full_unstemmed Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title_short Antibiotic Consumption Patterns in European Countries May Be Associated with the Incidence of Major Carcinomas
title_sort antibiotic consumption patterns in european countries may be associated with the incidence of major carcinomas
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7601152/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32993020
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics9100643
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