| Literature DB >> 28684845 |
Zhi He1,2, Pan Li1,2, Jianguo Zhu3, Bota Cui1,2, Lijuan Xu1,2, Jie Xiang1,2, Ting Zhang1,2, Chuyan Long1,2, Guangming Huang1,2, Guozhong Ji1,2, Yongzhan Nie4, Kaichun Wu4, Daiming Fan4, Faming Zhang5,6.
Abstract
The ancient Chinese medical literature, as well as our prior clinical experience, suggests that fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could treat the inflammatory mass. We aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of multiple fresh FMTs for Crohn's disease (CD) complicated with intraabdominal inflammatory mass. The "one-hour FMT protocol" was followed in all patients. Twenty-five patients were diagnosed with CD and related inflammatory mass by CT or MRI. All patients received the initial FMT followed by repeated FMTs every 3 months. The primary endpoint was clinical response (improvement and remission) and sustained clinical remission at 12 months. Secondary endpoints were improvement in size of phegmon/abscess based upon cross-sectional imaging and safety of FMT. 68.0% (17/25) and 52.0% (13/25) of patients achieved clinical response and clinical remission at 3 months post the initial FMT, respectively. The proportion of patients at 6 months, 12 months and 18 months achieving sustained clinical remission with sequential FMTs was 48.0% (12/25), 32.0% (8/25) and 22.7% (5/22), respectively. 9.5% (2/21) of patients achieved radiological healing and 71.4% (15/21) achieved radiological improvement. No severe adverse events related to FMT were observed. This pragmatic study suggested that sequential fresh FMTs might be a promising, safe and effective therapy to induce and maintain clinical remission in CD with intraabdominal inflammatory mass.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28684845 PMCID: PMC5500501 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-04984-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The characteristics of included patients.
| Items | Results |
|---|---|
| Total number, n | 25 |
| Age, m ± SD (years, range) | 36.4 ± 12.63 (18–61) |
| Sex, male % (n) | 52% (13) |
| Disease duration (years, m ± SD) | 6.2 ± 3.91 |
| Harvey Bradshaw Index (m ± SD) | 11.0 ± 2.68 |
| Disease location, % (n) | |
| Ileum | 12% (3) |
| Ileum and colon | 76% (19) |
| Colon | 12% (3) |
| Perianal lesions, % (n) | 72% (18) |
| Steroid dependent before FMT, % (n) | 40% (10) |
| Failed or cannot afford biologic therapy, % (n) | 56% (14) |
| Treatment history, % (n) | |
| Steroids | 68% (17) |
| Immunosuppressants | 60% (15) |
| Anti-TNFαantibody | 28% (7) |
| Surgery | 72% (18) |
| Diagnosis of inflammatory mass, % (n) | |
| Phlegmon | 88% (22) |
| Abscess | 12% (3) |
| Inflammatory mass location, % (n) | |
| Ileum/right lower quadrant | 76% (19) |
| Ascending colon | 8% (2) |
| Descending colon | 4% (1) |
| Sigmoid | 8% (2) |
| Presacral region | 4% (1) |
| Associated fistula,% (n) | 52% (13) |
| Associated stenosis,% (n) | 32% (8) |
Figure 1The percentage of FMTs induced response at each assessment point. (A) The changing rate of clinical response induced by the initial FMT within three months. (B) The changing rate of “response”, “remission” and “sustained clinical remission” during the follow-up at each assessment point. The response included clinical remission and clinical improvement. The remission included patients with sustained clinical remission and patients with relapse/flare but induced to remission by FMT. The sustained clinical remission included patients without any relapse/flare during the follow-up.
Figure 2Harvey-Bradshaw Index (HBI) scores over the study period. (A) The HBI score at baseline and one month after the initial FMT (n = 25). Nine patients rapidly achieved clinical remission within one week, and 13 had clinical remission within one month. (B) The change in HBI scores during follow-up (1–18 months) with multiple FMTs (n = 25). 9 patients experienced relapse or flare with the activity of their diseases were controlled by repeated FMTs. 5 patients eventually achieved sustained clinical remission at the assessment point of 18 months.
Inflammatory mass change and evaluation. RLQ, right lower quadrant; ND, not detected; ATB, antibiotics; FU, follow-up; The size of inflammatory mass was the maximum diameter times the vertical short diameter in the largest cross section.
| Case | Diagnosis | CT/MRI | Location | Associate with | Used ATB before FMT | Baseline size (cm*cm) | Size at best time (cm*cm) | Final outcome | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Within the sixth months of FU | After the sixth months of FU | radiological | Clinical | |||||||
| 1 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula + Stricture | Yes | 5.3*3.6 | 3.5*2.7 | 4.4*3.3 | Improved | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 2 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 4.8*2.8 | 3.8*2.9 | 3.5*2.3 | Improved | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 3 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ascending colon | None | No | 4.7*3.9 | ND | 3.9*2.8 | Improved | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 4 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula | No | 8.0*5.4 | ND | 7.4*4.3 | Improved | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 5 | Phlegmon | CT | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula | Yes | 14.0*8.0 | 3.8*3.3 | 0.0*0.0 | Healed | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 6 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 4.9*3.1 | ND | 3.9*2.8 | Improved | Sustained remission by FMTs |
| 7 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Stricture | No | 7.9*2.0 | 7.4*3.5 | ND | Worse | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 8 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | Yes | 8.4*3.9 | 4.7*2.8 | 5.2*2.3 | Improved | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 9 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula | No | 8.9*6.2 | 8.2*5.5 | ND | Improved | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 10 | Abscess | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 9.5*7.3 | 6.3*5.0 | ND | Improved | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 11 | Phlegmon | MRI | Descending colon | Fistula + Stricture | No | 5.7*7.7 | ND | 8.4*5.9 | Worse | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 12 | Abscess | MRI | Presacral region | Fistula | Yes | 6.1*3.5 | 5.8*2.7 | 5.5*2.8 | Improved | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 13 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 8.3*5.4 | ND | 4.8*5.2 | Improved | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 14 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula | No | 6.9*4.2 | 3.4*2.9 | 0.0*0.0 | Healed | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 15 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Stricture | No | 5.3*5.1 | ND | ND | ND | Flare or relapse controlled by FMT |
| 16 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 6.1*5.3 | 5.7*5.4 | 6.6*5.2 | Unchanged | Stable for 18 months but then worse |
| 17 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula + Stricture | Yes | 7.0*6.1 | 5.6*5.6 | ND | Improved | No response to FMT |
| 18 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 6.6*4.8 | ND | ND | ND | No response to FMT |
| 19 | Phlegmon | MRI | Sigmoid | Fistula + Stricture | No | 5.8*5.4 | 6.3*4.3 | ND | Improved | No response to FMT |
| 20 | Phlegmon | MRI | Sigmoid | Fistula | No | 6.9*5.7 | ND | ND | ND | No response to FMT |
| 21 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | No | 8.9*8.1 | 9.5*7.2 | ND | Unchanged | No response to FMT |
| 22 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ascending colon | Fistula + Stricture | No | 8.7*7.9 | 7.7*6.4 | ND | Improved | No response to FMT |
| 23 | Phlegmon | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | None | Yes | 10.1*6.7 | ND | 9.0*5.4 | Improved | Partial response, switch to stoma |
| 24 | Phlegmon | CT | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula + Stricture | No | 9.7*7.6 | 8.4*7.5 | ND | Improved | Partial response, switch to stoma |
| 25 | Abscess | MRI | Ileum/RLQ | Fistula | Yes | 12.4*7.9 | ND | ND | ND | Partial response, switch to stoma |
Figure 3Dynamic contrast-enhanced MRI and diffusion-weighted MRI imaging improved the differentiation of CD and the related inflammatory mass. This case (patient 14) was diagnosed as a fistulizing mass at the terminal ileum ((A), before FMT) and was assessed as radiological improvement ((B), three months after FMT).
Figure 4Study Design (A) and Multiple FMTs schedule (B).