3.8 Review

The role of faecal microbiota transplantation: looking beyond Clostridioides difficile infection

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SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/2049936120981526

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faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT); clostridioides difficile infection (CDI); dysbiosis; inflammatory bowel disease (IBD); irritable bowel syndrome (IBS); liver disease

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Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) involves transferring screened and minimally processed faecal material from a healthy donor to a diseased recipient, and has shown therapeutic potential in various conditions beyond recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). However, challenges such as unclear mechanisms of action, lack of standardization, regulatory disagreements, and limited long-term data hinder its widespread adoption. Further research with rigorous methodology is needed to better understand the utility of FMT for indications beyond CDI.
Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is the transfer of screened and minimally processed faecal material from a 'healthy' donor to 'diseased' recipient. It has an established role, and is recommended as a therapeutic strategy, in the management of recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (CDI). Recognition that gut dysbiosis is associated with, and may contribute to, numerous disease states has led to interest in exploiting FMT to 'correct' this microbial imbalance. Conditions for which it is proposed to be beneficial include inflammatory bowel disease, irritable bowel syndrome, liver disease and hepatic encephalopathy, neuropsychiatric conditions such as depression and anxiety, systemic inflammatory states like sepsis, and even coronavirus disease 2019. To understand what role, if any, FMT may play in the management of these conditions, it is important to consider the potential risks and benefits of the therapy. Regardless, there are several barriers to its more widespread adoption, which include incompletely understood mechanism of action (especially outside of CDI), inability to standardise treatment, disagreement on its active ingredients and how it should be regulated, and lack of long-term outcome and safety data. Whilst the transfer of faecal material from one individual to another to treat ailments or improve health has a history dating back thousands of years, there are fewer than 10 randomised controlled trials supporting its use. Moving forward, it will be imperative to gather as much data from FMT donors and recipients over as long a timeframe as possible, and for trials to be conducted with rigorous methodology, including appropriate control groups, in order to best understand the utility of FMT for indications beyond CDI. This review discusses the history of FMT, its appreciable mechanisms of action with reference to CDI, indications for FMT with an emerging evidence base above and beyond CDI, and future perspectives on the field.

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