Oral microbiota in patients with oropharyngeal cancer with an emphasis on Candida spp.

Autor: N. S. Bagirova, I. N. Petukhova, Z. V. Grigorievskaya, A. V. Sytov, P. V. Slukin, E. A. Goremykina, O. E. Khokhlova, N. K. Fursova, A. E. Kazimov
Jazyk: ruština
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Опухоли головы и шеи, Vol 12, Iss 3, Pp 71-85 (2022)
Druh dokumentu: article
ISSN: 2222-1468
2411-4634
DOI: 10.17650/2222-1468-2022-12-3-71-85
Popis: Introduction. Interactions between the 2 microbiota components – bacteria and fungi – are of interest as diagnostic and prognostic markers in selection of treatment tactics for oncological patients.Aim. To study microbiota of the oral cavity in patients with primary squamous cell carcinoma of the oropharyngeal area before and after surgical intervention to find biomarkers for rational selection of antifungal drugs.Materials and methods. At the Surgical Department of Head and Neck Tumors of the N. N. Blokhin National Research Center of Oncology, three-component study was performed: investigations of spectrum of Candida spp. isolates, Candida spp. strains’ resistance to antifungals, and oral washes in primary patients before and after surgery. mALDI-Tof microflex LT (Biotyper, Bruker Daltonics, germany) was used for strain identification; Sensititre Yeast ONE, YO10 (Trek Diagnostic System, united kingdom) plates were used for determination of minimal inhibiting concentrations of anti fungals. values of minimal inhibiting concentrations were evaluated based on the European Committee on Antimicrobial Susceptibility Testing (EuCAST) criteria (version 10.0).Results. four-year observation of patients at the surgical department of head and neck tumors of the N. N. Blokhin National Research Center of Oncology showed that the most common species of Candida is C. albicans (73.5 % of cases). Candida spp. resistance to antifungals was detected only for fluconazole (9.3 % of cases) and micafungin (8.0 % of cases), mostly among C. albicans strains. In 31.8 % of primary patients, oral washes prior to surgery showed growth of Candida spp. (probably, tissue colonization). After surgical intervention, Candida spp. growth was detected in 36.4 % of cases, only 1 of which was diagnosed as invasive mycosis. In 54.5 % of cases before and in 72.7 % of cases after surgery, gram-negative rods were detected. After surgical intervention, percentage of enterobacteria and non-fermenters significantly increased: 59.1 % versus 27.3 % (p
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