Research progress on oral microecological imbalance and intervention strategies after radiotherapy for head and neck tumors
10.12016/j.issn.2096-1456.202550349
- Author:
LIU Xue
1
;
LI Yufei
1
;
YANG Xinyao
1
;
LI Hao
2
;
ZHANG Ailin
1
;
CUI Lei
1
;
HUANG Zhengwei
2
;
HOU Lili
3
Author Information
1. School of Nursing, Shanghai Jiao Tong University
2. Department of Endodontics, Ninth People's Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
3. Nursing Department, Ninth People's Hospital Affiliated to Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine
- Publication Type:Review
- Keywords:
head and neck tumor;
radiotherapy;
radiation-induced oral mucosal disease;
oral microecologi⁃cal;
microecology imbalance;
probiotics;
prebiotics;
microbiota transplantation;
oral microbiota;
precision modulation
- From:
Journal of Prevention and Treatment for Stomatological Diseases
2026;34(4):385-394
- CountryChina
- Language:Chinese
-
Abstract:
Radiotherapy is a crucial treatment modality for head and neck tumors. However, while effectively killing tumor cells, it significantly disrupts the homeostasis of the oral microecology, which is closely associated with various complications such as radiation-induced oral mucositis. Literature review indicates that as radiotherapy doses accumulate and treatment durations extend, the richness and diversity of the oral microbiota show a declining trend, with the genus Streptococcus decreasing most markedly. In contrast, radiotherapy selectively promotes the proliferation of bacterial phyla such as Proteobacteria and Bacteroidetes, which are rich in opportunistic pathogens. Mechanistically, radiotherapy activates the nuclear factor-kappa B pathway, triggering chronic inflammation and oxidative stress, damaging the epithelial barrier, suppressing local immunity, and causing damage to organs such as the salivary glands. It can also induce systemic diseases via the oral-gut axis, forming a multi-level, interconnected pathogenic network. In terms of interventions, treatment strategies including probiotics and prebiotics have shown promising efficacy against side effects such as radiation-induced oral mucositis. Saliva-based oral microbiota transplantation is an emerging strategy that is expected to become widely utilized for restoring oral microecological balance. Existing interventions provide preliminary pathways for clinical practice, but this field still faces several key scientific questions. The association between oral microecology and systemic diseases remains largely correlative, lacking causal evidence. Furthermore, critical parameters for oral microbiota transplantation, such as donor screening criteria, transplantation protocols, and long-term safety, are not yet well-defined. Therefore, future research should focus on conducting large-scale clinical trials to establish standardized protocols and safety evaluation systems for oral microecological interventions, and explore combined treatment therapies such as probiotics, prebiotics, and microbiota transplantation to advance the development of personalized precision modulation. These will enable more effective management of radiotherapy-induced oral microecological dysbiosis and improve treatment outcomes and quality of life for patients with head and neck tumors.
- Full text:202605181701408945头颈肿瘤放疗后口腔微生态失调及其干预策略的研究进展.pdf