Abstract
Breast cancer (BC) is the second most common cancer in women in the United States. Of those diagnosed, 40-80% will undergo chemotherapy. Adverse effects of chemotherapy are chemotherapy-induced diarrhea (CID) and gut microbiota dysregulation. CID can lead to dehydration, metabolic acidosis, malnutrition, and gut dysbiosis. Antidiarrheal medications are the standard treatment of care; however, this has been shown to further contribute to gut dysbiosis, is not always effective in controlling diarrhea, and can lead to rebound constipation with the potential of pathogenic bacterial overgrowth. In this case report, we describe the experience of a patient-centered, personalized intervention with pre- and probiotics to preserve the microbiota and prevent CID. A 57-year-old postmenopausal female with BC undergoing adriamycin-cyclophosphamide (AC) and taxol-cyclophosphamide (TC) chemotherapies for invasive ductal carcinoma under the care of a cancer team wanted to refrain from using loperamide and instead use nutritional interventions and supplementation for preventing CID and maintaining gut health. This case report is a narrative report of the observed outcomes of one patient with BC after taking specific prebiotics and probiotics. The outcomes included the prevention of CID and other gastrointestinal adverse effects, and maintaining microbiota alpha-diversity, butyrate producing genera, and Bifidobacterium populations while inhibiting the overgrowth of Proteobacteria pathogenic bacteria.