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In Hungary - in comparison to other member states of the European Union - about 75000 new cases of cancer are diagnosed annually, from which approximately 4500-5000 patients suffer from so-called malignant hematological diseases. This disease group includes various leukemias (blood cancers) and lymphomas (lymph node cancers). Chemotherapy for patients with malignant hematological diseases is particularly difficult to bear, as it affects the entire body, including the "good" gut bacteria living inside, and recovery can take several years. Due to the decrease of the "good" gut bacteria during treatment, patients are more prone to acquiring various difficult-to-treat infections, which can lead to deterioration of quality of life, prolonged hospitalization, and in the worst cases, death. The method outlined in this research plan is called fecal microbiota transplantation, during which stool from a healthy person is introduced into the body of the sick patient. The "good" gut bacteria present in the stool then restore the patient's entire gut flora (the process is somewhat similar to the use of probiotics available on the market, but it is a much more effective method). This research aims to assess the success of fecal microbiota transplantation in adults with malignant hematological diseases over a long-term follow-up period, thus contributing to the restoration of their acceptable quality of life.
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Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is currently a widely accepted method of manipulating enteric microbiome, and is an internationally recommended procedure in the treatment for Clostridioides (formerly Clostridium) difficile (C. difficile) infection. The goal of FMT is to restore physiological gut microbiome through natural competition, by administering a stool graft harvested from a healthy person. FMT not only eliminates C. difficile-induced colitis, but also colonization of multidrug-resistant bacterial/fungal species, and certain types of intestinal epithelial damage occuring in some medical conditions. In recent years due to pleiotropic effects of FMT, scientific interest has turned towards adult patients with malignant hematological diseases, since all of the pathological conditions mentioned earlier occur during clinical care in this population, due to detrimental effects of immuno-chemotherapy. Based on promising preliminary results, FMT could be a successful, easily implementable intervention for these patients in the future.
Therefore, the aim of this study is to perform FMTs in four indication groups among adult patients with malignant hematological diseases treated at South Pest Central Hospital - National Institute of Hematology and Infectious Diseases (Budapest, Hungary), followed by a 180-day follow-up period, during which standardized clinical, laboratory, imaging, and microbiological data are collected. In addition, a high-resolution microbiome analys to monitor microbiological changes of recipient pre-/post-FMT blood and stool samples is planned, in collaboration with Departmental Group of Infectious Diseases and Institute of Medical Microbiology of Semmelweis University (Budapest, Hungary).
This study aims to assess both the bacterial and fungal components of the enteric microbiome in adult patients receiving routine clinical care for malignant hematological diseases, and to explore the potential of manipulating the microbiome through fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT). The hypothesis is that microbiome manipulation with FMT in these patients may induce a successful and sustained response by restoring the physiological intestinal microbiome, a premise that this long-term, comprehensive clinical and microbiological follow-up study seeks to support.
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100 participants in 2 patient groups
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