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The objectives/specific aims of this study are three-fold. First, the study seeks to evaluate the safety of fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) in patients with severe, complicated C. difficile infection (scCDI). Second, the study seeks to evaluate whether fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) can improve scCDI, with "improve" defined as either decreasing the severity of CDI, or by resolving the infection altogether. Third, the study seeks to further study the mechanism by which FMT improves the course of scCDI by performing 16S rRNA and ITS sequencing on pre-FMT and serial post-FMT stool samples in order to measure changes to bacterial and fungal microbiota as a consequence of CDI and FMT therapy. FMT material (hereafter referred to as FMTm) would be obtained from OpenBiome. FMTm is prepared from prescreened healthy donors.
The hypothesis of the study is that FMT is a preferred salvage therapy for scCDI as compared to (1) ongoing, failing medical therapy with conventional antibiotics and (2) surgery.
Full description
The objectives/specific aims of this study are three-fold. First, the study seeks to evaluate the safety of fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) in patients with severe, complicated C. difficile infection (scCDI). Second, the study seeks to evaluate whether fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) can improve scCDI, with "improve" defined as either decreasing the severity of CDI, or by resolving the infection altogether. Third, the study seeks to further study the mechanism by which FMT improves the course of scCDI by performing 16S rRNA and ITS sequencing on pre-FMT and serial post-FMT stool samples in order to measure changes to bacterial and fungal microbiota as a consequence of CDI and FMT therapy. FMT material (hereafter referred to as FMTm) would be obtained from OpenBiome. FMTm is prepared from prescreened healthy donors.
The hypothesis of the study is that FMT is a preferred salvage therapy for scCDI as compared to (1) ongoing, failing medical therapy with conventional antibiotics and (2) surgery.
The standard of care treatment for scCDI is conventional antibiotics with either parenteral/oral metronidazole, and/or vancomycin provided in the form of oral and/or retention enemas. The reliability of these conventional antibiotics in the setting of scCDI is very unpredictable, and patients with CDI of this severity have a mortality rate that in some series is greater than 50%. It is against the mediocre historical record of these antibiotics that FMT would be tested in this highly moribund patient population.
FMT would not be provided to patients with scCDI off protocol.
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Inclusion criteria
Adults between 18 years of age and 75 years of age.
Have CDI defined as clinical symptoms of CDI (diarrhea with or without abdominal pain/abdominal distention) with a confirmatory nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) positive for CDI.
Have severe/complicated disease as defined by ACG guidelines(appendix 1), with any of the following attributable to CDI:
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or lactating women
Prisoners
Patients under the age of 18 or over the age of 76 years of age
Patients who are immunocompromised including but not limited to:
Individuals who have received FMT at any time before potential study enrollment
Patients who do not have a stool test confirming C. difficile infection
Patients who have a severe anaphylactic response to food
Patients with allergies to sodium chloride or glycerol, both ingredients Generally Recognized As Safe (GRAS)
Patients who have colorectal cancer
Diagnosis of Irritable Bowel Disease or Irritable Bowel Syndrome
Any other condition for which the Principal Investigator thinks the treatment may pose a health risk
Anticipated or predicted death within the time period of follow-up for reasons unrelated to CDI
An APACHE II score >29 at the time of evaluation for inclusion in the study protocol (Appendix 4.0)
Mandatory ongoing antibiotic use for non-CDI infection
Patients unable to provide informed consent or who do not have a legally authorized representative for consent
Patients unable to comply with requirements of this study protocol
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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