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Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) has increased worldwide in both frequency and severity. It is the leading cause of hospital acquired infection in developed countries and has been associated with at least 14,000 deaths per year in the United States. With 3 million cases/ year, the annual cost for treating the infection is exceeding 3 billion dollars. It can also have a profound negative impact on quality of life.
The investigators believe that patients who are at high risk of relapse after a first CDI episode would benefit from early fecal microbial transplant (FMT). The proposed study will produce preliminary data regarding safety and efficacy and potential for cost effectiveness for the use of early fecal transplant in those patients with their first episode of non-refractory CDI who are predicted to have a high rate of recurrence based on previously published risk factors. The investigators will be better prepared to test the efficacy of this approach in a future multicenter clinical trial in a randomized controlled fashion.
The purpose of this study is to compare the effectiveness and safety of early fecal transplant using donor stool from a healthy person in a group of patients who are diagnosed with their first episode of Clostridium difficile infection and are predicted to have a high chance of the infection returning against a similar group of patients who receive current standard of care for treatment of C.difficile.
The investigators hypothesize:
Full description
Treatment of CDI remains challenging, especially in those with recurrent disease. Failures rates of 20-30% with initial treatment have been reported, and up to 65% fail after a third course of antibiotics. In addition, costs of treatment, which can be upward of $3000 for a 10 day course of a single antibiotic, may leave many patients and their families financially overburdened. Use of FMT has shown to be effective with cure rates above 80%, safe even in immunocompromised patients, and cost effective in those with recurrent (3 or more) episodes of C.difficile. Emory University and Emory Clinic have performed over 100 FMT's since July 2012 for treatment of recurrent or refractory CDI and has had similar cure rates.
Current treatment approaches for CDI limit the use of fecal transplant to those who have had more than 2 recurrences with at least one failure of a 6-8 week taper with vancomycin or at least 2 episodes of severe CDI resulting in hospitalization or refractory CDI defined as moderate CDI not responding to standard therapy for at least one week (5). However, the investigators feel that by attempting to perform FMT early after a first episode in those at high risk of recurrence, decreased recurrence rates, improved quality of life, and lower health care costs will be seen.
Patients who participate will be randomized to one of two groups - one group who receives a fecal transplant and another group who will not receive a fecal transplant. A fecal transplant using a sigmoidoscopy will occur after the subjects in the fecal transplant arm complete the course of antibiotics for treatment of the C.difficile infection. Healthy stool from a donor will be infused into the colon to help replenish good bacteria that patients with C.difficile infection often do not have. The group that does not undergo FMT will take antibiotics and probiotic therapy for management of CDI as part of standard of care.
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Inclusion criteria
Patients must meet all of the following criteria to be eligible for the study:
First or second episode of CDI responding to therapy
Must have 2 or more of the following criteria:
Willingness to accept a fecal product made using unrelated donor stool and to comply with study protocol requirements
Able to give informed consent
Chronic infection with HIV, HBV, HCV is permitted unless the viral infection compromises the ability of the patient to safely participate in the study. Patients with a CD4 count <200 and/ or AIDS defining illness or decompensated cirrhosis will not be eligible for the study.
Life expectancy >4 months
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13 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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