Yes, you heard it correctly. A prestigious journal of New England Journal
published a study using stool transplant to cure an intractable bowel
infection. Clostridium Difficile bacteria
is one of the most common hospital acquired infection in the US. Many of of these patients received
antibiotics for medical reason. The antibiotics kill bad as well as good
bacteria. The population of good
bacteria in the colon becomes unstable and decreasing. This is when the C. Difficile bacteria
becomes dominant and causing symptoms such as severe diarrhea, nausea and
vomiting.
The standard treatment usually is
using Metronidazole or Vancomycin antibiotics.
However, the C Difficile infection sometime becomes difficult to
treat conventionally. There are even
cases require colon resection to cure the bowel infection.
The most recent publication is using
donor stool (from other healthy persons) which is infused into your stomach/duodenum
thru a tube. The investigators randomly
assigned patients to receive one of three therapies: an initial vancomycin
regimen (500 mg orally four times per day for 4 days), followed by bowel lavage
and subsequent infusion of a solution of donor feces through a nasoduodenal
tube; a standard vancomycin regimen (500 mg orally four times per day for 14
days); or a standard vancomycin regimen with bowel lavage. The primary end
point was the resolution of diarrhea associated with C. difficile infection
without relapse after 10 weeks.
The study was stopped after an
interim analysis of 16 patients. In the
infusion group, 13 (81%) had resolution of C. difficile-associated diarrhea
after the first infusion. The 3 remaining patients received a second infusion
with feces from a different donor, with resolution in 2 patients. Resolution of
C. difficile infection occurred in 4 of 13 patients (31%) receiving vancomycin
alone and in 3 of 13 patients (23%) receiving vancomycin with bowel lavage
(P<0.001 for both comparisons with the infusion group). No significant
differences in adverse events among the three study groups were observed except
for mild diarrhea and abdominal cramping in the infusion group on the infusion
day. After donor-feces infusion, patients showed increased fecal bacterial
diversity, similar to that in healthy donors, with an increase in Bacteroidetes
species and clostridium clusters IV and XIVa and a decrease in Proteobacteria
species.
Yes, it is sound like an out of the
box idea. But I praise these
investigators who could think out of the box for their patients. I still think you should only get this treatment
after all other conventional treatment have been used - consider it experimental.
Reference:
van Nood E, et al. Duodenal infusion
of donor feces for recurrent Clostridium difficile. N Engl J Med. 2013;368(5):407.
This is, indeed, very interesting. I was wondering how effective the increasingly popular over-the-counter probiotics would be in, at least, possibly avoiding C-Diff if one was at risk; and if probiotics should be avoided by immune compromised chemotherapy patients.
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