| Literature DB >> 32990503 |
Elisabeth M Terveer1, Karuna Ew Vendrik1, Rogier E Ooijevaar2, Emilie van Lingen3, Eline Boeije-Koppenol1, Els van Nood4, Abraham Goorhuis5, Martijn P Bauer6, Yvette H van Beurden2,7, Marcel Gw Dijkgraaf8, Chris Jj Mulder2, Christina Mje Vandenbroucke-Grauls9, Jos Fml Seegers10, Joffrey van Prehn1, Hein W Verspaget3,11, Ed J Kuijper1, Josbert J Keller3,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Netherlands Donor Feces Bank provides standardized ready-to-use donor faecal suspensions for faecal microbiota transplantation treatment of patients with recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection.Entities:
Keywords: Clostridioides difficile; Faecal microbiota transplantation; cure rate; donor; microbiome; microbiota modifying therapy; stool bank
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32990503 PMCID: PMC7724536 DOI: 10.1177/2050640620957765
Source DB: PubMed Journal: United European Gastroenterol J ISSN: 2050-6406 Impact factor: 4.623
Results of the donor selection and screening process.
| Donors (%) | Action | Excluded (%) | Exclusion reasonsa |
|---|---|---|---|
| 871 | Request for more information by donor | 603 (69%) | 52% ( |
| 268 (100%) ↓ | Donor fills-out an extended questionnaire | 185 (69%) | 22% ( |
| 83 (31%) ↓ | Interview | 17 (20%) | 65% ( |
| 66 (25%) ↓ | Faeces[ | 47 (71%) | 89% ( |
| 22[ | Serum screening | 0 (0%) | None |
| 22[ | First rescreening and donor withdrawalActive donor | 6 (27%) | Exclusion of quarantined donor suspensions: 83%
( |
BMI: body mass index; IBS: irritable bowel syndrome; MDRO: multidrug-resistant organism.
aSome volunteers had multiple exclusion criteria, exclusion is displayed as the percentage of total excluded donors as result of a particular screening step.
bFrom September 2018 changed to 55 years, or 60 years with negative colon carcinoma screening.
cHigher risk of temporary carriership of pathogens.
dClose relative with colon carcinoma with an onset below the age of 50 years.
eScreening algorithm used: first screening includes: Dientamoeba fragilis, microscopy for Blastocystis sp., MDRO and Helicobacter pylori screening, if negative, then additional tests are performed (Supplementary Material Table S1).
fThree donors were excluded at first screening, successfully decolonized of MDRO, D. fragilis or E. histolytica, and they subsequently continued the donor screening program.
Results of the evaluation of faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) requests by multidisciplinary FMT expert panel.
| FMT decision | Number of requests |
|---|---|
| FMT request rejected by NDFB expert panel | 47/176 (27%) |
| Reasons of rejection of the 47 FMT requests: | |
| 30 (64%) | |
| • Diarrhoea with unknown cause | –18 |
| • Diarrhoea due to IBD | –12 |
| Anti-CDI antibiotics advised instead of FMT; | 11 (23%) |
| • First, mild recurrence | –7 |
| • New CDI infection (too long interval between CDI episodes) | –4 |
| Long-term antibiotic use/elective operation | 3 (6%) |
| Withdrawal of FMT request after observed antibiotic treatment effect, by treating physician or patient | 3 (6%) |
| Request for FMT approved by NDFB expert panel | 129/176 (73%) |
| FMT indication[ | |
| • Multiple recurrent CDI | 125 (97%) |
| • Severe, therapy refractory CDI | 3 (2%) |
| • Refractory CDI | 1 (1%) |
CDI: Clostridioides difficile infection; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease.
aOne hundred and forty-three FMTs performed in 129 patients. Ten patients received multiple FMTs; nine patients for treatment of a post-FMT CDI relapse (seven patients cured with a single repeat FMT, one patient cured with two repeat FMTs, one patient cured with antibiotics after a repeat FMT) and one patient received sequential FMT treatment for severe, therapy refractory CDI (in total six FMTs; three FMTs for a first episode and three FMTs for the relapse).
Figure 1.Kaplan-Meier curve of the Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) (faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) failure, early relapse or late recurrence)-free survival post-FMT.
Patient, donor and faecal suspension risk factors for Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI) relapse within two months after faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).
| Characteristic | Patients with relapse within two months post-FMT | Patients cured at two months post-FMT | Results statistical analyses (OR (95% CI), p-value) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Patient sex (female) | 77% (10/13) | 58% (67/116) | OR 2.4 (0.6–9.3), |
| Donor sex (female) | 54% (7/13) | 50% (58/116) | OR 1.2 (0.4–3.7), |
| Donor – patient sex mismatch | 39% (5/13) | 47% (54/116) | OR 0.7 (0.2–2.3), |
| Patient’s age (at FMT) | 69 years (41–96) | 70 years (2–92) | |
| Donor’s age (at donation) | 36 years (24–46) | 35 years (24–46) | |
| Lower gastro-intestinal infusion of FMT (sigmo- or colonoscopy) | 23% (3/13) | 8% (9/116) | OR 3.6 (0.8–15.3), |
| Mean processing time of the faecal suspension (defaecation to freezer) | 163 min | 168 min | |
| Mean storage time of the faecal suspension (at –80°C) | 214 days | 275 days | |
| Severe CDI as indication for FMT | 8% (1/13) | 2% (2/116) | OR 4.8 (0.4–56.3), |
| Prior CDI relapses, before FMT is performed | 2.6 (13) | 2.8 (114) | |
| PPI use | 61% (8/13) | 51% (55/108) | OR 1.5 (0.5–5.0), |
| Comorbidity of IBD | 8% (1/13) | 11% (13/114) | OR 0.7 (0.1–5.4), |
| Severe kidney comorbidity: dialysis or kidney transplantation | 8% (1/13) | 9% (24/112) | OR 1.0 (0.1–8.2), |
| rUTI in medical history | 0% (0/13) | 8% (9/113) | |
| Use of non-CDI antibiotics in between the prior CDI episodes | 46% (6/13) | 38% (43/113) | OR 1.4 (0.4–4.4), |
| Immunocompromised[ | |||
| – Not | 61% (8/13) | 82% (93/114) | |
| – Moderate | 23% (3/13) | 18% (20/114) | |
| – Severe | 15% (2/13) | 1% (1/114) | |
| Hypervirulent clade[ | 25% (2/8) | 20% (13/65) | OR 1.3 (0.2–7.4), |
| Post-FMT hospitalization for non-CDI indications post-FMT[ | 23% (3/13) | 14% (14/102) | OR 1.9 (0.5–7.7), |
| Post-FMT infection (other than CDI)c | 15% (2/13) | 17% (17/102) | OR 0.9 (0.2–4.5), |
| Post-FMT antibiotic use (non-CDI indications)[ | 39% (5/13) | 15% (15/102) | OR 3.6 (1.0–12.6), |
CI: confidence interval; IBD: inflammatory bowel disease; OR: odds ratio; PPI: proton pump inhibitor; rCDI: recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection; rUTI: recurrent urinary tract infection.
Percentages and final odds ratio with 95% CIs of FMT-treated patients with or without early CDI relapse.
aImmunocompromised classified as: not, moderate or severe. Patients are regarded as severely immunocompromised when: neutropenic, (scheduled or received last 100 days) an allogenic stem cell transplantation, active Graft-versus-host-disease requiring immunosuppressive agents, and moderately immunocompromised when: having <200 CD4 T-cells/µl, prolonged use of corticosteroids at a mean dose of 0.3 mg/kg/d of prednisone equivalent for >3 weeks, treatment with other recognized T-cell immunosuppressants during the last 90 days or have an inherited severe immunodeficiency.
bHypervirulent clade RT027 (016, 019, 0247, 036, 075, 111, 112, 153, 156, 176, 208, 273) and clade RT078 (033, 045, 066, 078, 126, 127).
cIn the first 3 weeks post-FMT.
Gastro-intestinal complaints post-faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).
| Gastro-intestinal complaint | Day of FMT[ | 1-week post-FMT[ | 3-weeks post-FMT[ | LTFU[ |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nausea (% yes) | 20% (19/94) | 14% (13/96) | 11% (11/97) | 18% (13/73) |
| Abdominal pain (% yes) | 33% (31/93) | 28% (27/97) | 21% (21/98) | 21% (15/71) |
| Diarrhoea (% yes) | 52% (48/93) | 30% (29/97) | 27% (26/97) | 33% (24/73) |
| Self-rated defaecation pattern (post-FMT vs before CDI episode) | n/a | n/a | ||
| • Improved | 16% (13/80) | 38% (25/65) | ||
| • Similar | 68% (54/80) | 46% (30/65) | ||
| • Deteriorated | 16% (13/80) | 15% (10/65) |
LTFU: long-term follow-up; rCDI: recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection.
aA questionnaire is filled in by the patient or treating physician at regular follow-up 3–4 weeks post-FMT.
bLTFU: median 42 weeks, range 19–143 weeks.
(Serious) adverse events (AEs) within three weeks after faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT).
| Description adverse event | Number of patients | |
|---|---|---|
| Definitively or probably related to FMT | ||
| SAE | None | 0% (0/128) |
| AE | Procedure-related AEs– Regurgitation, no aspiration, patient successfully treated– Sore throat after placing duodenal tube | 4% (5/128) – 4– 1 |
| Possibly related to FMT | ||
| SAE | Hospitalization within 3 weeks post-FMT due to: – Lower
respiratory tract infection (causing pathogen unknown)[ | 8% (9/115) – 5– 3– 1 |
| AE | Gastro-intestinal (see | 11–52%– 5– 1– 1– 1 |
| Unrelated to FMT | ||
| SAE | Hospitalization (or prolonged hospitalization) within 3
weeks post-FMT– Lower respiratory tract infection (COPD
exacerbation due to | 15% (17/115) – 2– 3– 6– 3– 1– 1– 1 |
| AE | Infections– Otitis, infection of toe, phlegmon groin | - 3 |
CDI: Clostridioides difficile infection; SAE: serious adverse event; UTI: urinary tract infection; COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CVA: cerebro vascular accident; GI: gastrointestinal; GvHD: graft versus host disease; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; RSV: respiratory syncytial virus; SCT: stem cell transplantation.
aFour patients (80%, 4/5) developing a pneumonia had a medical history of either chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, asthma or lung fibrosis.
bFour patients (44%, 4/9) had known predisposing factors for UTI (medical history of pyelonephritis, diabetes type II and benign prostate hypertrophy, Sachse urethrotomy or Bricker bladder).