| Literature DB >> 35158960 |
Maroun Bou Zerdan1, Stephanie Niforatos1, Sandy Nasr1, Dayana Nasr1, Mulham Ombada1, Savio John1,2, Dibyendu Dutta1,3, Seah H Lim1,3.
Abstract
Understanding of the importance of the normal intestinal microbial community in regulating microbial homeostasis, host metabolism, adaptive immune responses, and gut barrier functions has opened up the possibility of manipulating the microbial composition to modulate the activity of various intestinal and systemic diseases using fecal microbiota transplant (FMT). It is therefore not surprising that use of FMT, especially for treating relapsed/refractory Clostridioides difficile infections (CDI), has increased over the last decade. Due to the complexity associated with and treatment for these diseases, patients with hematologic and oncologic diseases are particularly susceptible to complications related to altered intestinal microbial composition. Therefore, they are an ideal population for exploring FMT as a therapeutic approach. However, there are inherent factors presenting as obstacles for the use of FMT in these patients. In this review paper, we discussed the principles and biologic effects of FMT, examined the factors rendering patients with hematologic and oncologic conditions to increased risks for relapsed/refractory CDI, explored ongoing FMT studies, and proposed novel uses for FMT in these groups of patients. Finally, we also addressed the challenges of applying FMT to these groups of patients and proposed ways to overcome these challenges.Entities:
Keywords: challenges; fecal microbiota transplant; hematologic diseases; oncologic diseases; outcome
Year: 2022 PMID: 35158960 PMCID: PMC8833574 DOI: 10.3390/cancers14030691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1The two steps of fecal microbiota transplant. In Step 1, patients undergo bowel preparation with oral antibiotics followed by laxative. At least 24 h after the last dose of oral antibiotics, the patient will receive the donor fecal material via capsule, naso-enteral tubes, or upper or lower gastrointestinal endoscopy.
Figure 2Fecal microbiota transplant restores intestinal microbial composition to modulate the adaptive immune responses, re-establish intestinal microbial homeostasis, and alter the host metabolism. Short chain fatty acids such as butyrate and propionate interact with G-protein coupled receptors GPR-43/41 on L cells to produce glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) and peptide YY (PYY), which contributes to reducing food intake and improving glucose metabolism [17].
Results of selected studies on the use of FMT for relapsed/refractory CDI.
| Reference | Data Source | Number of Patients (n) | Outcome | Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Youngster et al. [ | A prospective study | 180 using oral frozen capsules | CDI resolved in 82% of patients after a single treatment, rising to a 91% cure rate with two treatments. | Three cases of Grade 2 or above adverse reactions deemed related to the FMT were reported: One transient high fever, two new endoscopic diagnoses of ulcerative colitis. |
| Furuya-Kanamori et al. [ | A collaborative analysis of patient data from 14 studies | 305 (207 by lower and 98 by upper gastrointestinal route) | Risk of clinical failure was 5.6% and 17.9% in those treated by upper gastrointestinal route, and 4.9% and 8.5% in those treated by lower gastrointestinal route at Day 30 and 90, respectively. | Not reported. |
| Liu et al. [ | Single center retrospective data | 25 procedures (via feeding tube (n = 11), upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (n = 8), or colonoscopy (n = 6) in 24 patients) | Symptoms resolved in 21 of 24 patients (87.5%). Three patients who did not respond underwent a second FMT and all three responded | No serious adverse reactions were attributed to FMT. |
| Ponte et al. [ | Single center retrospective study | 34 (via upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (n = 30) or colonoscopy (n = 4) | Cure after one FMT in 22/25 (88%) and after two or more FMT in another 2/25 (8%). | No serious adverse reactions were reported. |
| Kelly et al. [ | FMT National Registry Data | 222 had follow-up at 1 month and 123 at 6 months. | 90% cure rate at 1 month and 96% cure rate at 6 months. | At 1 month, 1% had hospitalization for diarrhea and severe abdominal pain, felt probably related to FMT; at 6 months, 1% developed irritable bowel syndrome and 1% inflammatory bowel disease. |
Figure 3Patients with hematologic and oncologic diseases are more likely to develop Clostridioides difficile infection due to the frequent use of antibiotics, opioid analgesia and proton pump inhibitors, chemoradiation, and immunosuppressive agents. As a result, a change in the intestinal microbial composition and integrity of the epithelium results in the reduced production of short chain fatty acids, intestinal dysbiosis, thinning of the mucin layers, immune dysregulation, interruption to tight-junction formation, increased translocation of luminal microbes into the systemic circulation, and the development of Clostridioides difficile infections.
Reported results of FMT for corticosteroid-refractory GVHD.
| Reference | Data Source | Number of Patients (n) | Outcome | Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kakihana et al. [ | Single center prospective study | 4 (received a total of 7 FMT by nasogastric administration) | 3 CR and 1 PR | 1 case of lower gastrointestinal bleed and hypoxemia, may not be related to FMT |
| Spindelboeck et al. [ | Retrospective case series | 3 (received a total of 9 FMT by colonoscopy) | 2 CR and 1 PR | None reported |
| Qi et al. [ | Single center prospective study | 8 (received a total of 12 FMT by nasogastric administration) | 5 CR and 1 PR | None reported |
| Shouval et al. [ | Single center prospective study | 7 (received a total of 15 FMT by capsule administration) | 2 CR | 2 episodes of bacteremia, deemed unrelated to FMT |
| van Lier et al. [ | Single center prospective study | 15 (received a total of 15 FMT by nasoduodenal tube administration) | 10 CR | None reported |
| Zhao et al. [ | Single center open-label Phase I/II study | 41 (23 assigned to FMT and 18 to control. FMT administered by nasojejunal or gastric tube) | Overall response rate of 82.6% (52.2% CR and 30.4% PR) in the FMT group and 39% (all PR) in the control group on Day 14 after FMT, and an overall response rate of 69.5% (56.5% CR and 13% PR) in the FMT group and 50% (16% CR and 34% PR) in the control group on Day 21 after FMT | No difference in the adverse events between the FMT group and the control group. |
| Goeser et al. [ | Two-center retrospective study | 11 (9 by capsule and 2 by nasojejunal tube administration) | Attenuation of stool volume and frequency was observed in all 11 patients | Abdominal pain occurred in 3 patients and vomiting in 1 patient |
| Mao et al. [ | Case report | 1 (received two cycles of FMT administered by capsules) | CR | None reported |
Clinical studies registered in Clinicaltrials.gov for hematologic and oncologic patients in the US and in Europe.
| NCT# | Study | Primary Outcome Measurements | Number of Patients (n) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 02928523 | PreventiOn of DYSbioSis Complications With Autologous FMT in AML Patients (ODYSSEE) | Evaluation of efficacy in dysbiosis correction and multidrug resistant bacteria based on bacterial culture | 20 |
| 03678493 | A Study of FMT in Patients With AML Allo HSCT in Recipients | Efficacy of FMT in AML patients and allo-HSCT recipients in reducing the incidence of infections | 120 |
| 04935684 | Faecal Microbiota Transplantation After Allogeneic Stem Cell Transplantation (TMF-Allo) | GVHD and relapse-free survival rate after allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation | 150 |
| 04269850 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation With Ruxolitinib and Steroids as an Upfront Treatment of Severe Acute Intestinal GVHD (JAK-FMT) | Overall survival | 20 |
| 05094765 | Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) Capsule for Improving the Efficacy of GI-aGVHD | Overall survival and Grade 3 or above adverse events | 15 |
| 02269150 | Autologous Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (Auto-FMT) for Prophylaxis of Clostridium Difficile Infection in Recipients of Allogeneic Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation | CDI up to one year after entry into study | 59 |
| 03214289 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation for Steroid Resistant and Steroid Dependent Gut Acute Graft Versus Host Disease | Serious adverse events | 4 |
| 02733744 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation After HSCT | Feasibility on the number of participants able to ingest 15 FMT capsules over a 2-day period | 18 |
| 03359980 | Treatment of Steroid Refractory Gastro-intestinal Acute GVHD afteR AllogeneiC HSCT With fEcal Microbiota tranSfer (HERACLES) | Efficacy of FMT in steroid refractory -gastro-intestinal acute GVHD at Day 28 | 24 |
| 03819803 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in aGvHD After ASCT | Remission at Day 90 | 15 |
| 04038619 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Treating Immune-Checkpoint Inhibitor Induced-Diarrhea or Colitis in Genitourinary Cancer Patients | Tolerability and response | 40 |
| 02770326 | Safety of Stool Transplant for Patients With Difficult to Treat C. Difficile Infection | Incidence of CDI | 10 |
| 04116775 | Fecal Microbiota Transplant and Pembrolizumab for Men With Metastatic Castration Resistant Prostate Cancer. | Anticancer effect of FMT from responders to pembrolizumab to non-responders. | 32 |
| 04040712 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Diarrhea Induced by Tyrosine-kinase Inhibitors | Resolution of diarrhea four weeks after FMT | 20 |
| 03819296 | Role of Gut Microbiome and Fecal Transplant on Medication-Induced GI Complications in Patients With Cancer | Differences in stool microbiome pattern and adverse events | 800 |
| 04951583 | Fecal Microbial Transplantation Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer and Melanoma (FMT-LUMINATE) | Overall response rate | 70 |
| 04521075 | A Phase Ib Trial to Evaluate the Safety and Efficacy of FMT and Nivolumab in Subjects With Metastatic or Inoperable Melanoma, MSI-H, dMMR or NSCLC | Overall response rate and adverse events | 42 |
| 04163289 | Preventing Toxicity in Renal Cancer Patients Treated With Immunotherapy Using Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (PERFORM) | Rate of immune-related colitis associated with ipilimumab/nivolumab treatment | 20 |
| 04729322 | Fecal Microbiota Transplant and Re-introduction of Anti-PD-1 Therapy (Pembrolizumab or Nivolumab) for the Treatment of Metastatic Colorectal Cancer in Anti-PD-1 Non-responders | Overall response rate | 15 |
| 04924374 | Microbiota Transplant in Advanced Lung Cancer Treated With Immunotherapy | Measurements of safety | 20 |
| 03341143 | Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) in Melanoma Patients | Overall response rate | 18 |
| 03353402 | Fecal Microbiota Transplantation (FMT) in Metastatic Melanoma Patients Who Failed Immunotherapy | Rate of adverse events and engraftment | 40 |
| 04988841 | Assessing the Tolerance and Clinical Benefit of feCAl tranSplantation in patientS With melanOma (PICASSO) | Safety and tolerability | 60 |
| 04577729 | The IRMI-FMT Trial | Progression-free survival | 60 |