Antibiotics Weren’t Used to Cure These Patients. Fecal Bacteria Were.

Swordsmyth

Member
Joined
Apr 14, 2016
Messages
74,737
Antibiotics Weren’t Used to Cure These Patients. Fecal Bacteria Were.

The bacteria can take over a person’s intestines and be difficult to eradicate. The infection causes fever, vomiting, cramps and diarrhea so severe that it kills 14,000 people a year in the United States alone.
The first line of treatment for the attacking microbes, called Clostridium difficile, is antibiotics. But a group of Norwegian researchers asked if something more unusual — an enema containing a stew of bacteria from feces of healthy people — might work just as well.
The answer, according to a report today in the New England Journal of Medicine, is yes.
Until now, there has never been a clinical trial conducted in more than one medical center that has investigated so-called fecal transplants as a first therapy for C. difficile infections, said Dr. Michael Bretthauer, a gastroenterologist at the University of Oslo and lead author of the new study.
The Food and Drug Administration permits fecal transplants and professional societies endorse them, but only a last resort for treating C. difficile infections after antibiotics have failed, said Dr. Alexander Khoruts, a gastroenterologist at the University of Minnesota.


“The F.D.A. and all the professional societies are in full agreement on this point,” he said.
Several small clinical trials and doctors’ clinical experience have shown that a fecal transplant can help in that desperate situation.
“It’s definitely a paradigm shift to use it earlier rather than later,” Dr. Nasia Safdar, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Wisconsin — Madison.


The study, conducted in Norway, was small — just 20 patients randomly assigned to get the fecal bacteria or antibiotics. That’s not enough to determine whether transplants are better than antibiotics.
Instead, the research was intended to show that treatment with fecal bacteria is no worse.
Five out of nine patients who received fecal bacteria were cured immediately of their infections, compared to five of 11 in the group getting antibiotics. Three of the four remaining patients who got fecal bacteria then got antibiotics; two were cured within days.
None of the antibiotic patients whose symptoms persisted after their first round of treatment were cured with a second round of the drugs.

More at: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/02/health/fecal-transplants-bacteria-antibiotics.html
 
Back
Top