| Literature DB >> 34709989 |
Gianluca Ianiro1, Stefano Bibbò1, Serena Porcari1, Carlo Romano Settanni1, Federica Giambò1, Andreea Roxana Curta1, Gianluca Quaranta2, Franco Scaldaferri1, Luca Masucci2, Maurizio Sanguinetti2, Antonio Gasbarrini1, Giovanni Cammarota1.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a risk factor for C. difficile infection (CDI), which, in turn, complicates the clinical course of IBD. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is safe and effective in patients with IBD and recurrent CDI (rCDI). In our study, patients with IBD and rCDI received FMT by colonoscopy and were followed-up for 8 weeks. The primary outcome was negative C. difficile toxin 8 weeks after FMT. Eighteen patients with IBD were enrolled. Eight patients received sequential FMT either for pseudomembranous colitis or failure of single fecal infusion. At 8-week follow-up the C. difficile toxin was negative in 17 patients, and most (83%) experienced also improvement of IBD disease activity. Overall, we did not observe any serious adverse event.FMT appears to be highly effective and safe in patients with IBD and rCDI and is likely not only to eradicate CDI but also to improve disease activity of IBD.Entities:
Keywords: Clostridioides difficile infection; Crohn’s disease; Fecal microbiota transplantation; gut microbiota; inflammatory bowel disease; microbiome; ulcerative colitis
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34709989 PMCID: PMC8555518 DOI: 10.1080/19490976.2021.1994834
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Microbes ISSN: 1949-0976
Characteristics of patients at baseline, of treatments, and of outcomes after FMT
| N | |
|---|---|
| Baseline characteristics of patients | |
| Total number of patients | 18 |
| Males/females | 10/8 |
| Median age (range) | 50 (21–79) |
| Median time (years) from IBD diagnosis (range) | 5 (1–30) |
| Ulcerative colitis | 16 |
| Location | |
| E1 (proctitis) | 2 |
| E2 (left sided) | 6 |
| E3 (pancolitis) | 8 |
| Crohn’s disease | 2 |
| Location | |
| L1 (ileal) | 1 |
| L2 (colonic) | 0 |
| L3 (ileocolonic) | 1 |
| L4 (upper GI tract) | 0 |
| Phenotype | |
| B1 (inflammatory) | 1 |
| B2 (stricturing) | 1 |
| B3 (penetrating) | 0 |
| IBD Therapies | |
| Systemic 5-ASA | 12 |
| Topic 5-ASA | 6 |
| Systemic corticosteroids | 5 |
| Topic corticosteroids | 5 |
| Immunosuppressants | 1 |
| Biologics | 7 |
| Clinical activity of disease at baseline | |
| Ulcerative colitis (partial Mayo Score) | |
| Remission | 0 |
| Mild | 3 |
| Moderate | 10 |
| Severe | 3 |
| Crohn’s disease (Harvey-Bradshaw index) | |
| Remission | 0 |
| Mild | 0 |
| Moderate | 2 |
| Severe | 0 |
| Endoscopic activity of disease at baseline | |
| Ulcerative colitis (endoscopic Mayo Score) | |
| Remission | 0 |
| Mild | 3 |
| Moderate | 10 |
| Severe | 3 |
| Crohn’s disease (SES-CD) | |
| Remission | 0 |
| Mild | 1 |
| Moderate | 0 |
| Severe | 1 |
| Antibiotic treatments before FMT | |
| Vancomycin | 18 |
| Metronidazole | 5 |
| Fidaxomicin | 2 |
| Median number of CDI recurrences (range) | 2 (1–5) |
| Outpatients/inpatients | 16/2 |
| Clinical picture of CDI | |
| Mild | 16 |
| Severe | 2 |
| Pseudomembranous colitis | 3 |
| Donors | |
| Unrelated | 18 |
| Related | 0 |
| Number of fecal infusions | |
| N = 1 | 9 |
| N = 2 | 8 |
| N = 3 | 1 |
| Eradication of CDI (negative toxin) | |
| After single fecal infusion | 9/15 |
| After multiple fecal infusion (post-FMT failure) | 5/6 |
| After | 3/3 |
| Overall | 17/18 |
| Clinical activity of disease after FMT | |
| Ulcerative colitis (partial Mayo Score) | |
| Remission | 9 |
| Mild | 3 |
| Moderate | 4 |
| Severe | 0 |
| Crohn’s disease (Harvey-Bradshaw index) | |
| Remission | 1 |
| Mild | 1 |
| Moderate | 0 |
| Severe | 0 |
| Serious advent events | 0 |
Figure 1.
Disease activity indexes before and after FMT in our cohort