Fecal transplant against relapsing Clostridium difficile-associated diarrhea in 32 patients.

Category Primary study
JournalScandinavian journal of gastroenterology
Year 2012
Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD) with frequent watery stools, sometimes with painful bowel movements, fever and sickness, is probably the major known cause of antibiotic-associated diarrhea and colitis, most probably depending on a disruption of the normal intestinal balance in the microbiome. In this study, we have inoculated a mixture of fecal microbes--as an enema--originating from a healthy Scandinavian middle-aged donor, regularly re-cultivated under strict anaerobic conditions for more than 10 years, to 32 patients. Twenty-two patients (69%) were durably cured. In those patients receiving the transplant by colonoscopy, four out of five were cured. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first time a fecal culture of microbes has retained the possibility for years to cure a substantial number of patients with CDAD.
Epistemonikos ID: 67c21f4332ab24e712bc1b2845e4c00fe25f9655
First added on: Jul 16, 2013