Periodontitis and risk of cancer: Mechanistic evidence

Author:

Baima Giacomo1,Minoli Margherita2,Michaud Dominique S.3,Aimetti Mario1,Sanz Mariano45,Loos Bruno G.6,Romandini Mario5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Surgical Sciences, C.I.R. Dental School University of Turin Turin Italy

2. Department of Periodontology Università Vita‐Salute San Raffaele Milan Italy

3. Department of Public Health and Community Medicine Tufts University School of Medicine Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Faculty of Odontology University Complutense Madrid Spain

5. Department of Periodontology, Faculty of Dentistry University of Oslo Oslo Norway

6. Department of Periodontology, ACTA ‐ Academic Centre for Dentistry Amsterdam University of Amsterdam and Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractThis review aims to critically analyze the pathways of interaction and the pathogenic mechanisms linking periodontitis and oral bacteria with the initiation/progression of cancer at different body compartments. A higher risk of head and neck cancer has been consistently associated with periodontitis. This relationship has been explained by the local promotion of dysbiosis, chronic inflammation, immune evasion, and direct (epi)genetic damage to epithelial cells by periodontal pathobionts and their toxins. Epidemiological reports have also studied a possible link between periodontitis and the incidence of other malignancies at distant sites, such as lung, breast, prostate, and digestive tract cancers. Mechanistically, different pathways have been involved, including the induction of a chronic systemic inflammatory state and the spreading of oral pathobionts with carcinogenic potential. Indeed, periodontitis may promote low‐grade systemic inflammation and phenotypic changes in the mononuclear cells, leading to the release of free radicals and cytokines, as well as extracellular matrix degradation, which are all mechanisms involved in carcinogenic and metastatic processes. Moreover, the transient hematogenous spill out or micro‐aspiration/swallowing of periodontal bacteria and their virulence factors (i.e., lipopolysaccharides, fimbriae), may lead to non‐indigenous bacterial colonization of multiple microenvironments. These events may in turn replenish the tumor‐associated microbiome and thus influence the molecular hallmarks of cancer. Particularly, specific strains of oral pathobionts (e.g., Porphyromonas gingivalis and Fusobacterium nucleatum) may translocate through the hematogenous and enteral routes, being implicated in esophageal, gastric, pancreatic, and colorectal tumorigenesis through the modulation of the gastrointestinal antitumor immune system (i.e., tumor‐infiltrating T cells) and the increased expression of pro‐inflammatory/oncogenic genes. Ultimately, the potential influence of common risk factors, relevant comorbidities, and upstream drivers, such as gerovulnerability to multiple diseases, in explaining the relationship cannot be disregarded. The evidence analyzed here emphasizes the possible relevance of periodontitis in cancer initiation/progression and stimulates future research endeavors.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Periodontics

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