FMT holds considerable promise as a therapy for recurrent CDI but well-designed, RCTs and long-term follow-up registries are still required. These are needed to identify the right patient, efficacy and safety profile of FMT before this approach can be widely advocated.
Recurrent hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is a leading cause of readmission despite standard of care (SOC) associated with microbial dysbiosis. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) may improve dysbiosis; however, it has not been studied in HE. We aimed to define whether FMT using a rationally-derived stool donor is safe in recurrent HE compared to SOC alone. An open-label, randomized clinical trial with a 5 month follow-up in outpatient cirrhotic men with recurrent HE on SOC was conducted with 1:1 randomization. FMT-randomized patients received 5-days of broad-spectrum antibiotic pre-treatment then a single FMT enema from the same donor with the optimal microbiota deficient in HE. Follow-up occurred on days 5, 6, 12, 35 and 150 post-randomization. The primary outcome was safety of FMT compared to SOC using FMT-related serious adverse events (SAE). Secondary outcomes were AEs, cognition, microbiota and metabolomic changes. Participants in both arms were similar on all baseline criteria and were followed till study-end. FMT with antibiotic pre-treatment was well-tolerated. Eight (80%) SOC participants had a total of 11 SAE compared to two (20%) FMT participants with SAEs (both FMT-unrelated, p=0.02). Five SOC and no FMT participants developed further HE (p=0.03). Cognition improved in FMT, but not SOC group. MELD score transiently worsened post-antibiotics, but reverted to baseline post-FMT. Post-antibiotics, beneficial taxa and microbial diversity reduction occurred with Proteobacteria expansion. However, FMT increased diversity and beneficial taxa. SOC microbiota and MELD score remained similar throughout.
Conclusions:
FMT from a rationally selected donor reduced hospitalizations, improved cognition and dysbiosis in cirrhosis with recurrent HE.
Although faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) has a well-established role in the treatment of recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI), its widespread dissemination is limited by several obstacles, including lack of dedicated centres, difficulties with donor recruitment and complexities related to regulation and safety monitoring. Given the considerable burden of CDI on global healthcare systems, FMT should be widely available to most centres.Stool banks may guarantee reliable, timely and equitable access to FMT for patients and a traceable workflow that ensures safety and quality of procedures. In this consensus project, FMT experts from Europe, North America and Australia gathered and released statements on the following issues related to the stool banking: general principles, objectives and organisation of the stool bank; selection and screening of donors; collection, preparation and storage of faeces; services and clients; registries, monitoring of outcomes and ethical issues; and the evolving role of FMT in clinical practice,Consensus on each statement was achieved through a Delphi process and then in a plenary face-to-face meeting. For each key issue, the best available evidence was assessed, with the aim of providing guidance for the development of stool banks in order to promote accessibility to FMT in clinical practice.
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