| Literature DB >> 28087657 |
Giovanni Cammarota1, Gianluca Ianiro1, Herbert Tilg2, Mirjana Rajilić-Stojanović3, Patrizia Kump4, Reetta Satokari5, Harry Sokol6, Perttu Arkkila7, Cristina Pintus8, Ailsa Hart9, Jonathan Segal9, Marina Aloi10, Luca Masucci11, Antonio Molinaro12, Franco Scaldaferri1, Giovanni Gasbarrini1, Antonio Lopez-Sanroman13, Alexander Link14, Pieter de Groot15, Willem M de Vos5,16, Christoph Högenauer4, Peter Malfertheiner14, Eero Mattila17, Tomica Milosavljević18, Max Nieuwdorp12,15,19, Maurizio Sanguinetti11, Magnus Simren20, Antonio Gasbarrini1.
Abstract
Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an important therapeutic option for Clostridium difficile infection. Promising findings suggest that FMT may play a role also in the management of other disorders associated with the alteration of gut microbiota. Although the health community is assessing FMT with renewed interest and patients are becoming more aware, there are technical and logistical issues in establishing such a non-standardised treatment into the clinical practice with safety and proper governance. In view of this, an evidence-based recommendation is needed to drive the practical implementation of FMT. In this European Consensus Conference, 28 experts from 10 countries collaborated, in separate working groups and through an evidence-based process, to provide statements on the following key issues: FMT indications; donor selection; preparation of faecal material; clinical management and faecal delivery and basic requirements for implementing an FMT centre. Statements developed by each working group were evaluated and voted by all members, first through an electronic Delphi process, and then in a plenary consensus conference. The recommendations were released according to best available evidence, in order to act as guidance for physicians who plan to implement FMT, aiming at supporting the broad availability of the procedure, discussing other issues relevant to FMT and promoting future clinical research in the area of gut microbiota manipulation. This consensus report strongly recommends the implementation of FMT centres for the treatment of C. difficile infection as well as traces the guidelines of technicality, regulatory, administrative and laboratory requirements. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
Keywords: CLINICAL DECISION MAKING; DIARRHOEAL DISEASE; ENTERIC BACTERIAL MICROFLORA
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28087657 PMCID: PMC5529972 DOI: 10.1136/gutjnl-2016-313017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut ISSN: 0017-5749 Impact factor: 23.059
Definition of the strength of recommendation and statement
| Strength | Definition |
|---|---|
| Strong | Strongly supports a recommendation for use and/or a statement |
| Weak | Marginally supports a recommendation for use and/or a statement |
Definition of the quality of evidence (QoE)
| QoE | Definition |
|---|---|
| Strong | Evidence from at least one properly designed RCT |
| Moderate | Evidence from at least one well-designed clinical trial, without randomisation; from cohort or case–control analytic studies (preferably from more than one centre); from multiple time series |
| Low | Evidence from opinions of respected authorities, based on clinical experience, descriptive case studies or reports of expert committees |
RCT, randomised controlled trial.
Clinical pictures compatible with CDI according to the ESCMID guidelines (modified from Debast et al).13
| Clinical picture | Definition |
|---|---|
| Severe | Episode of CDI with one or more specific clinical (fever, haemodynamic instability, respiratory failure which needs mechanical ventilation, signs and symptoms of peritonitis, signs and symptoms of colonic ileus), laboratory (marked leucocytosis, rise in serum creatinine and lactate, marked decrease of serum albumin), radiological (colon distension, colonic wall thickening) or endoscopic (pseudomembranous colitis), symptoms and signs of severe colitis or complicated course of disease |
| Recurrent | When CDI recurs within 8 weeks after the onset of a previous episode, provided the symptoms from the previous episode resolved after completion of initial treatment. It is not feasible to distinguish recurrence due to relapse (renewed symptoms from already present CDI) from recurrence due to reinfection in daily practice |
| Refractory | CDI that is unresponsive to the antimicrobial treatment, namely persistence of diarrhoea with CD toxin positive or persistent diarrhoea with toxin negative in the absence of other possible causes of diarrhoea (eg, IBS, IBD, non-CDI antibiotic-associated diarrhoea) |
CDI, Clostridium difficile infection; ESCMID, European Society for Microbiology and Infectious Disease.