Author
Listed:
- Andrew J. Tock
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Kamrun S. Patel
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Emma Morales-Walker
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Linglan Zhang
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Chris Orthodoxou
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Alasdair D. MacRitchie
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Stephen Njoroge
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Oladapo E. Olaniru
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Guy Mozolowski
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Inês Mendes
(Suite 400, Theiagen Genomics)
- Dave J. Baker
(Norwich, Quadram Institute Bioscience, Research Park)
- Malvin Siew
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Hannah N. Humphrey
(Exeter, Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust)
- Eleanor T. Walker-Davies
(Exeter, Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust)
- Frank McDermott
(Exeter, Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust)
- Sue Spencer
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Susan Bird
(Headington, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headley Way)
- Katerina-Vanessa Savva
(Imperial College London, Department of Surgery and Cancer)
- Christopher Cunningham
(Headington, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headley Way)
- Hannah Rottenburg
(Exeter, Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust)
- Heena Sisodia
(Truro, Royal Cornwall Hospital, Treliske)
- Nick J. Battersby
(Truro, Royal Cornwall Hospital, Treliske)
- Gareth A. R. Jones
(Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust)
- Jon Lacy-Colson
(Shrewsbury and Telford NHS Trust)
- Alice E. Baggaley
(Imperial College London, Department of Surgery and Cancer)
- Christopher J. Peters
(Imperial College London, Department of Surgery and Cancer)
- Andrew Dodd
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Kiran Kang
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Chris Hamon
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Ana Crespillo-Casado
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Erica Law
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Megan Sands
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Hugo Lywood
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
- Andrew J. Page
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences
Norwich, School of Computing Sciences, The University of East Anglia)
- Ian Daniels
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences
Exeter, Royal Devon University Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust)
- Daniel Wise
(Granta Park, Origin Sciences)
Abstract
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is the fourth most common cancer and the third leading cause of cancer-related mortality worldwide, with incidence rising among younger populations. The significant clinical and economic burden highlights the need for minimally invasive technologies capable of detecting pre-malignant and early-stage disease. Although liquid biopsy approaches have advanced, they have not achieved sufficient performance for clinical adoption when compared with colonoscopy, the current diagnostic gold standard. CRC is a mucosal pathology, yet current diagnostic methods have not leveraged mucosal biology. Here we demonstrate the clinical utility of rectal mucus specimens, collected using a minimally invasive device in an outpatient setting, without bowel preparation. Through a hologenomic approach integrating host and microbial genomics, we identify genetic and epigenetic aberrations and perturbations in microbial communities that drive the detection of adenomatous polyps and CRC in rectal mucus. Hologenomic integration enables superior stratification of CRC by disease site and stage compared with single-omics methods. In summary, we demonstrate the clinical utility of rectal mucus sampling combined with hologenomic analysis as a translatable prospective tool for diagnostic application.
Suggested Citation
Andrew J. Tock & Kamrun S. Patel & Emma Morales-Walker & Linglan Zhang & Chris Orthodoxou & Alasdair D. MacRitchie & Stephen Njoroge & Oladapo E. Olaniru & Guy Mozolowski & Inês Mendes & Dave J. Baker, 2025.
"Hologenomic analysis of rectal mucus sampling for detection of adenomatous polyps and colorectal cancer,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-24, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-66006-1
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-66006-1
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