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Matching between Donors and Ulcerative Colitis Patients Is Important for Long-Term Maintenance after Fecal Microbiota Transplantation
by
Shibuya, Tomoyoshi
, Ito, Shoko
, Takahashi, Masahito
, Ishikawa, Dai
, Nomura, Kei
, Osada, Taro
, Nagahara, Akihito
, Okahara, Koki
, Haga, Keiichi
in
Antibiotics
/ Clinical medicine
/ Colon
/ Colonoscopy
/ Cytomegalovirus
/ Disease
/ Endoscopy
/ Feces
/ Hospitals
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Microbiota
/ Patients
/ Penicillin
/ Remission (Medicine)
2020
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Matching between Donors and Ulcerative Colitis Patients Is Important for Long-Term Maintenance after Fecal Microbiota Transplantation
by
Shibuya, Tomoyoshi
, Ito, Shoko
, Takahashi, Masahito
, Ishikawa, Dai
, Nomura, Kei
, Osada, Taro
, Nagahara, Akihito
, Okahara, Koki
, Haga, Keiichi
in
Antibiotics
/ Clinical medicine
/ Colon
/ Colonoscopy
/ Cytomegalovirus
/ Disease
/ Endoscopy
/ Feces
/ Hospitals
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Microbiota
/ Patients
/ Penicillin
/ Remission (Medicine)
2020
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Matching between Donors and Ulcerative Colitis Patients Is Important for Long-Term Maintenance after Fecal Microbiota Transplantation
by
Shibuya, Tomoyoshi
, Ito, Shoko
, Takahashi, Masahito
, Ishikawa, Dai
, Nomura, Kei
, Osada, Taro
, Nagahara, Akihito
, Okahara, Koki
, Haga, Keiichi
in
Antibiotics
/ Clinical medicine
/ Colon
/ Colonoscopy
/ Cytomegalovirus
/ Disease
/ Endoscopy
/ Feces
/ Hospitals
/ Inflammatory bowel disease
/ Microbiota
/ Patients
/ Penicillin
/ Remission (Medicine)
2020
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Matching between Donors and Ulcerative Colitis Patients Is Important for Long-Term Maintenance after Fecal Microbiota Transplantation
Journal Article
Matching between Donors and Ulcerative Colitis Patients Is Important for Long-Term Maintenance after Fecal Microbiota Transplantation
2020
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Overview
We previously demonstrated that fresh fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) following triple antibiotic therapy (amoxicillin, fosfomycin, metronidazole (AFM); A-FMT) resulted in effective colonization of Bacteroidetes species, leading to short-term clinical response in ulcerative colitis (UC). Its long-term efficacy and criteria for donor selection are unknown. Here, we analyzed the long-term efficacy of A-FMT compared to AFM monotherapy (mono-AFM). AFM was administered to patients with mild to severe UC for 2 weeks until 2 days before fresh FMT. Clinical response and efficacy maintenance were defined by the decrease and no exacerbation in clinical activity index. The population for intention-to-treat analysis comprised 92 patients (A-FMT, n = 55; mono-AFM, n = 37). Clinical response was observed at 4 weeks post-treatment (A-FMT, 56.3%; mono-AFM, 48.6%). Maintenance rate of responders at 24 months post-treatment was significantly higher with A-FMT than mono-AFM (p = 0.034). Significant differences in maintenance rate according to the age difference between donors and patients were observed. Additionally, sibling FMT had a significantly higher maintenance rate than parent–child FMT. Microbial analysis of patients who achieved long-term maintenance showed that some exhibited similarity to their donors, particularly Bacteroidetes species. Thus, A-FMT exhibited long-term efficacy. Therefore, matching between donors and UC patients may be helpful in effectively planning the FMT regimen.
Publisher
MDPI AG,MDPI
Subject
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