By Neena Bhandari
Sydney, 28.08.2025 (Oncology Republic): The complex interplay between antibiotics, gut microbiota and immune-modulating drugs in cancer treatment have been the focus of several studies for nearly a decade. It appears that antibiotics can disrupt gut microbiota diversity, which influences how well patients respond to immune checkpoint inhibitors and other immunotherapies, say researchers.
Dr Miles Andrews, consultant medical oncologist and head of Immuno-oncology at The Alfred, and research fellow at Monash University explains. “There have been some studies on the exposure to antibiotics in the 30 to 90 days prior to starting immune checkpoint inhibitor therapy for cancer,” he told Oncology Republic. “And there’s certainly a suggestion that antibiotic exposure is associated with an inferior overall survival across a range of epithelial cancers, for example, kidney and lung cancer, as well as melanoma.”
Several translational research models and pre-clinical models, mainly mice models of cancer, suggest that antibiotic exposure, presumably by altering the gut microbiome, has this negative effect on response to immune checkpoint blockade in cancer.