Page 5 - Introduction to FMT
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FMT Introduction





         Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a technique in which intestinal microbiota are transferred from a
         healthy donor to the patient, with the goal being to introduce or restore a stable microbial community in
         the gut. The first use of feces in such a manner was described, according to the Handbook of Emergency
         Medicine, approximately 1700 years ago by a Chinese medical scientist named Ge Hong[16]. It was first
         published in the English language by Eiseman et al[17] in 1958, when he reported a prompt response in
         patients with antibiotic-associated diarrhea treated with fecal enemas. Nevertheless, this practice was
         not well recognized until 1978, when investigators recognized Clostridium difficile infection (CDI) was the
         etiology of antibiotic-associated pseudomembranous colitis[18,19]. In the past few decades, the use of
         FMT for managing the increasing burdens of CDI has demonstrated it to be an effective therapeutic
         strategy for CDI[20-23]. In 2012, Borody et al[24] reported that more than 1200 cases have been treated in
         several centers. A total of 583 CDI patients treated with FMT produced a cumulative cure rate of more
         than 90% in 36 publications[25]. In addition, standardized frozen donor fecal bacterial preparations used in
         the treatment of recurrent CDI showed equal cure rates to fresh fecal samples[26]. 2013 guidelines for CDI
         have recommended that FMT should be considered if there is a third recurrence after a pulsed
         vancomycin regimen[27].



         Although there are still many areas of uncertainty concerning this emerging technology, including
         transmission of infectious organisms, long-term sequelae, and even cost-effective evaluation, the United
         States Food and Drugs Administration have recently paid critical attention to FMT protocol in clinical
         applications. Borody et al[24] regarded the flora in feces as a special organ, and therefore considered the
         technique of FMT as a particular type of organ transplantation, regardless of the issue of immunological
         rejection. FMT has hence emerged as an important therapeutic modality in the manipulation of altered
         intestinal microbiota, with the indications of FMT possibly being expanded to even extra-intestinal
         conditions.


         RATIONALE FOR FMT


         The exact mechanisms by which intestinal dysbiosis becomes involved in disease development are not
         completely elucidated. Alteration of metabolic activities induced by perturbed intestinal bacterial species
         leads to weakened defense of the gastrointestinal mucosa, which in turn leads to increasing intestinal
         permeability and toxic substances being absorbed into the systemic circulation. Prior work has observed
         disruption of the intestinal microbiota being evident at the phylum level, with marked depletion in levels
         of probiotics and a relative increase in the numbers of pathogens leading to 14


         Go to: complications in intestinal conditions[27]. The alteration of microbial communities in both
         inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and CDI patients was characterized by a reduction in two phyla of
         bacteria, Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes, which are prominent in healthy controls[28,29]. Moreover, an
         increase in Proteobacteria such as Enterobacteriaceae is also found in individuals with IBD[30].
         Bacteroides fragilis, the prominent human gut commensal, can prevent and cure inflammatory disease
         via the effect of its symbiosis factor (polysaccharide A, an immunomodulatory bacterial molecule) on the
         activation of the Toll-like receptor 2 pathway, inducing regulatory T cells and interleukin-10
         production[31]. Dextran sodium sulfate-induced colitis in a mouse model demonstrated that spore-
         forming Firmicutes in clostridial clusters IV and XIVa reduced intestinal inflammation through regulatory T
         cells induction[32].







                                                 FMT Introduction
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