APA
Ponce Alonso, Manuel & García Hoz, Carlota & Halperin, Ana & Nuño, Javier & Nicolás, Pilar & Martínez Pérez, Adolfo & Ocaña, Juan & García Pérez, Juan Carlos & Guerrero, Antonio & López Sanromán, Antonio & Cantón, Rafael & Roy, Garbiñe & del Campo, Rosa .An Immunologic Compatibility Testing Was Not Useful for Donor Selection in Fecal Microbiota Transplantation for Ulcerative Colitis.
ISO 690
Ponce Alonso, Manuel & García Hoz, Carlota & Halperin, Ana & Nuño, Javier & Nicolás, Pilar & Martínez Pérez, Adolfo & Ocaña, Juan & García Pérez, Juan Carlos & Guerrero, Antonio & López Sanromán, Antonio & Cantón, Rafael & Roy, Garbiñe & del Campo, Rosa. An Immunologic Compatibility Testing Was Not Useful for Donor Selection in Fecal Microbiota Transplantation for Ulcerative Colitis.
https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12080/24571
Résumé:
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is an effective procedure against Clostridioides
difficile infection (CDI), with promising but still suboptimal performance in other diseases,
such as ulcerative colitis (UC). The recipient¿s mucosal immune response against the
donor¿s microbiota could be relevant factor in the effectiveness of FMT. Our aim was to
design and validate an individualized immune-based test to optimize the fecal donor
selection for FMT. First, we performed an in vitro validation of the test by co-culturing
lymphocytes obtained from the small intestine mucosa of organ donor cadavers (n=7) and
microbe-associated molecular patterns (MAMPs) obtained from the feces of 19 healthy
donors. The inflammatory response was determined by interleukin supernatant
quantification using the Cytometric Bead Array kit (B&D). We then conducted a clinical
pilot study with 4 patients with UC using immunocompetent cells extracted from rectal
biopsies and MAMPs from 3 donor candidates. We employed the test results to guide
donor selection for FMT, which was performed by colonoscopy followed by 4 booster
instillations by enema in the following month. The microbiome engraftment was assessed
by 16S rDNA massive sequencing in feces, and the patients were clinically followed-up for
16 weeks. The results demonstrated that IL-6, IL-8, and IL-1ß were the most variable
markers, although we observed a general tolerance to the microbial insults. Clinical and
colonoscopy remission of the patients with UC was not achieved after 16 weeks, although
FMT provoked enrichment of the Bacteroidota phylum and Prevotella genus, with a
decrease in the Actinobacteriota phylum and Agathobacter genus. The most relevant
result was the lack of Akkermansia engraftment in UC. In summary, the clinical success of
FMT in patients with UC appears not to be influenced by donor selection based on the
explored recipient¿s local immunological response to FMT, suggesting that this approach
would not be valid for FMT fecal donor optimization in such patients.