Structured Abstract
Objectives:
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is arguably the most effective treatment for recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (rCDI). Clinical reports on pediatric FMT have not systematically evaluated microbiome restoration in patients with co-morbidities. Here we determined whether FMT recipient age and underlying co-morbidity influenced clinical outcomes and microbiome restoration when treated from shared fecal donor sources.
Methods:
Eighteen rCDI patients participating in a single-center, open-label prospective cohort study received fecal preparation from a self-designated (single case) or two universal donors. Twelve age-matched healthy children and 4 pediatric ulcerative colitis (UC) cases from an independent serial FMT trial, but with a shared fecal donor were examined as controls for microbiome restoration using 16S rRNA gene sequencing of longitudinal fecal specimens.
Results:
FMT was significantly more effective in rCDI recipients without underlying chronic co-morbidities where fecal microbiome composition in post-transplant responders was restored to levels of healthy children. Microbiome reconstitution was not associated with symptomatic resolution in some rCDI patients who had co-morbidities. Significant elevation in Bacteroidaceae, Bifidobacteriaceae, Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae and Erysipelotrichaceae was consistently observed in pediatric rCDI responders, while Enterobacteriaceae decreased, correlating with augmented complex carbohydrate degradation capacity.
Conclusion:
Recipient background disease was a significant risk factor influencing FMT outcomes. Special attention should be taken when considering FMT for pediatric rCDI patients with underlying co-morbidities.
Keywords: pediatric fecal transplant, Clostridioides difficile, inflammatory bowel disease, microbiome
Introduction
Clostridioides difficile (CDI) is a frequently reported nosocomial pathogen (1). Severe diarrhea associated with CDI is common leading to significant hospitalization, morbidity and mortality (2). Recent epidemiologic observations indicate normalizing or declining trends in the U.S. (3). CDI causes approximately half a million infections and over $1.5 billion in excess medical costs annually in the U.S. alone (2,4). The incidence of pediatric CDI is lower, but shows similar trends as in adults (5,6).
CDI disease recurrence is 20-30%, and the risk increases further with repeated infections despite new antibiotic treatments (7). Although still classified as an investigational procedure, fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is now regarded as the most effective clinical therapy for treating recurrent CDI (rCDI) (8, 9), supported by a systematic review of 844 patients (10). Similar cure rates are reported in children (11,12), but associated microbiome analyses are less common (13–16). Special consideration for FMT must be taken with pediatric rCDI cases given the high C. difficile asymptomatic carriage rate and the more frequent underlying clinical co-morbidities when compared to adults (17). These complications were recognized by the Infectious Diseases Society of America (IDSA) and Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America (SHEA) (18), emphasizing the need to critically evaluate FMT outcomes in pediatric rCDI cases.
To assess clinical efficacy and evaluate microbiome restoration, we conducted fecal 16S rRNA amplicon sequencing in a single-center cohort of eighteen pediatric rCDI patients who underwent FMT. The majority (94%) of cases received FMT from 2 universal donors, which created an opportunity to examine recipient-based microbiome restoration to FMT in children over a wide age range and co-morbidities. We compared clinical and microbiome differences in pediatric recipients who shared the same donor, thereby limiting biologic variation in clinical and microbiome outcomes.
Methods
Study design and outcome measures
Eighteen rCDI patients (8 females and 10 males; average 9.3 years (y; range 1.5-16) received FMT from February 2013 to December 2015 under IRB-approved informed consent (#H-31066) at Baylor College of Medicine (Supplementary Figure 1). The investigational nature of FMT was highlighted during consenting according to U.S. Food and Drug Administration regulations. CDI diagnosis was based on enzyme immunoassay (EIA), and/or culture, toxin PCR positivity, along with clinical complaints of 3 or more diarrheal stools per day. Any of the specific laboratory tests positive for toxigenic C. difficile in the beginning of the recurrent infection were considered as diagnostic. Since most patients were referred to our tertiary center, and repeat testing during the course of rCDI is not recommended (19), we did not incorporate a laboratory-based diagnostic algorithm. We recently highlighted (20) that no laboratory-based diagnostic is available to differentiate between infection and colonization with C. difficile in children (21).
Five patients had inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), one received a heart transplant, and three had significant neurologic impairment as underlying conditions (Table 1). All patients reported recurrent (within 2 months) or ongoing diarrheal symptoms in spite of at least two trials of CDI-directed antibiotics. All patients received at least one course of metronidazole (10-14 days) and at least one 14 day course of vancomycin orally (except for P02 who following a course of metronidazole and attempted home-based FMT from a parent donor, using a turkey baster with verbal instructions from the family doctor; she shortly had recurrent symptoms not responding to 4 days of vancomycin prior to FMT). Sixteen patients received vancomycin until one day prior to FMT, except for two patients (P01 and P18) who completed vancomycin therapy 2 and 3 weeks before FMT respectively and remained symptom free prior to FMT. These two rCDI patients had multiple recurrences historically and the clinical decision was made to provide FMT without allowing for a repeated recurrence. Absence of diarrhea was the main outcome measure within 8 weeks post FMT to stratify responders (R) versus non-responders (NR).
Table 1.
Summary of FMT for rCDI patients with or without underlying conditions
| Patient ID | Age (yr) | Gender | Category | Comorbidities | Diarrhea resolved | Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P01 | 14 | Male | Chronic GI condition | UC, GERD s/p fundo, hypogammaglobulinemia | No | Non-responder |
| P02 | 15 | Female | No underlying GI disease | -- | Yes | Responder |
| P03 | 15 | Female | Neurologic impairment | Prematurity 26 wk, cerebral palsy, global developmental delay | No (paradoxical diarrhea) | Non-responder |
| P04 | 4 | Male | No underlying GI disease | -- | Yes | Responder |
| P05 | 2 | Male | No underlying GI disease | GERD, transient hypogammaglobulinemia of infancy, chronic cough with recurrent resp tract infections, autism, previous exposure to sewage/mold | Yes (returned 7 months later, cleared with antibiotics) | Responder |
| P06 | 2 | Female | Heart transplant | Hypoplastic left heart syndrome s/p cardiac transplant, VUR | Yes (returned 2 months later after antibiotic therapy) Yes (after second FMT as well) |
Responder |
| P07 | 5 | Male | Chronic GI condition | CD | No (symptoms resolved only after several months once switched to vedolizumab) | Non-responder |
| P08 | 2 | Female | Neurologic impairment | Spastic quadriplegia, global developmental delay, infantile spasms, RAD, chronic lung disease, G-tube dependence, recurrent UTI | Yes after 2nd FMT; recurrence >1 yr later; no symptom resolution after 3rd FMT when fidaxomicin added and constipation addressed | Responder |
| P09 | 15 | Male | No underlying GI disease | -- | Yes | Responder |
| P10 | 16 | Female | Chronic GI condition | UC | Yes | Responder |
| P11 | 16 | Male | No underlying GI disease | -- | Yes | Responder |
| P12 | 5 | Female | No underlying GI disease | -- | Yes | Responder |
| P13 | 2 | Male | Neurologic impairment | Global developmental delay, GERD s/p GT placement/Nissen, aspiration/choking episodes, upper GI dysmotility | No (intermittent diarrhea/pain even after 2nd FMT; working diagnosis of mito-disease) | Non-responder |
| P14 | 7 | Female | Chronic GI condition | UC | No | Non-responder |
| P15 | 13 | Male | Chronic GI condition | UC | No (symptoms returned after 1 month; transiently improved while on intermittent vancomycin for 5 months + adalimumab then later vedolizumab) | Non-responder |
| P16 | 17 | Female | No underlying GI disease | Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome s/p cardiac ablation procedures | Yes (until one year later, had recurrence of Cdiff diarrhea that responded to vancomycin) | Responder |
| P17 | 3 | Male | No underlying GI disease | Recurrent otitis media s/p multiple courses of antibiotics | Yes (until 6 months later, developed Cdiff colitis despite receiving vanc ppx after penicillin injection; improved after vancomycin treatment) | Responder |
| P18 | 2 | Male | No underlying GI disease | Allergic rhinitis, eczema, multiple sinus infections | Yes | Responder |
Denotations: UC, ulcerative colitis; CD, Crohn’s disease; GERD, gastro-esophageal reflux disease; fundo, fundoplication; --, data/records/outcoe are not available.
Fecal samples from twelve age-matched healthy pediatric subjects were examined as controls (IRB protocols #H-35071 and #H-36399). Additionally, we examined pre- and post-treatment fecal samples from three ulcerative colitis (UC) patients (PCR negative for C. difficile toxin genes), who received 4 treatment series (one patient enrolled twice 1 year apart) of >20 FMTs (one colonoscopy and others via enema) over 8-12 weeks. Details of the non-CDI UC, serial FMT trial are already published (22). These cases served as disease controls for FMT without CDI and recent antibiotic exposure.
Donor and preparation
Patients received filtered, frozen-thawed fecal preparations from two, screened, standardized donors D2 (38-40 y male during donations) for 6 patients and D3 (38-40 y male during donations) for 10 patients. Patient P03 received FMT from both D2 and D3, and patient P06 received a self-designated donor D5 (recipient’s father). All patients received the first FMT via colonoscopy, followed by enema or nasogastric FMT (in 3 cases) if clinically indicated (Table 1). The donor screening and fecal preparation procedures were approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (IND#15743) and are published previously (22).
Stool collection and microbiome analysis
Fecal samples were collected from patients the day prior to FMT and 8-9 weeks following treatment at a follow-up visit (Supplementary Figure 2), or were sent on wet ice from home. The reason for this timing of stool collection was to match the clinic or phone based follow-up, which determined the treatment response by the commonly recommended timeline (i.e. 8 weeks) defining recurrence versus re-infection. Follow-up fecal samples from UC patients were obtained 2 weeks after serial FMT completion (patients in this study received 22 to 30 FMTs in a weaning fashion from daily to weekly enemas; we wished to examine post FMT microbiomes two weeks after the last treatment before a potential clinical flare would have occurred (22). All samples were processed and stored and 16S V4 sequenced as described by us (22).
Raw Illumina paired-end reads were merged by VSEARCH (version 2.9) (23). The default DADA2 package (version 1.8) (24) was used for sequence denoising with specific modification on sequence quality filtering using a maximum expected error of 2. Taxonomy of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) were annotated by IdTaxa function (25) with its pre-built SILVA reference database (release 132) using the stringent confidence threshold of 70. PICRUSt2 (26) was used to infer metagenomic functions based on ASV-assigned sequences. Downstream analyses including alpha-diversity (Shannon index) and beta-diversity were performed using the Non-metric Multidimensional Scaling (NMDS)-ordination method for Bray-Curtis dissimilarity profiling. ASV-ASV correlation networks were generated using Cytoscape (version 3.7.2) (27). Raw amplicon data was deposited to NCBI under accession number PRJNA735699.
Statistical analysis
Wilcoxon rank-sum test was applied to assess group differences using the R-based pairwise.Wilcox.test. Spearman-correlations were assessed using the R-based cor.test. Fischer’s exact testing was used for group comparisons. Multiple-comparisons were adjusted using the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure with statistical significance considered at p < 0.05.
Results
Patient Outcomes
Age did not affect treatment outcomes (patients <8 y [n=10] versus >12 y [n=8]; p=1). All nine patients without underlying GI disease (Table 1) had symptomatic resolution for more than 2 months following a single FMT. The success of FMT significantly differed between recipients without underlying chronic conditions and those with IBD, and/or immunosuppression, or significant neurodevelopmental delay (Fischer’s exact test, p=0.009). This separation was biased by the IBD patients (1 out of 5 [20%] who responded (Fischer’s exact test, p=0.005 compared to patients without underlying GI disease). Patients with other complicating conditions also showed diminished efficacy, but this did not reach significance (2 out 4 [50%] responded, Fischer’s exact test, p=0.077 compared to patients without underlying diseases).
Of the 9 patients with complicating clinical conditions, only 3 (33.3%: P06, P08, and P10) had obvious clinical benefit from C. difficile-directed antibiotics prior to FMT. These latter patients responded well to a single FMT, including the youngest solid organ transplant patient receiving treatment (28). However, two of the ‘chronic disease’ responders were treated with antibiotics for upper respiratory infections within the 2-month follow-up period, and experienced recurrence of CDI. Both received repeat vancomycin followed by intra-gastric FMT from the same donor as during their first FMT with full resolution of their symptoms for over 2 months.
One rCDI patient with UC (P01) required 3 FMT treatments to clear toxigenic C. difficile but remained symptomatic and still required colectomy during the subsequent clinical course despite being pathogen free by PCR-based testing. Our second patient with UC (P10; maintenance mesalamine therapy only) had rapid resolution of symptoms, and remained symptom free for 9 weeks, then experienced a C. difficile-positive flare of UC and was started on steroids and 6-mercaptopurine along with oral vancomycin for 2 weeks. The patient responded well to the intervention and subsequently tested negative for C. difficile 2 weeks after stopping vancomycin. Another patient with UC (P14) cleared the infection by PCR but remained symptomatic and required augmentation of immunosuppressive treatments. Our fourth patient with UC (P15) did not clear C. difficile after FMT, but became symptom free only after intense IBD treatment optimization.
One patient with global developmental delay (GDD, P03) was diagnosed with poorly managed constipation during her second enema FMT and continued with C. difficile carriage based on toxin-PCR testing, but clinically improved with constipation directed treatments. Another GDD patient (P13) cleared C difficile after FMT but remained symptomatic. There were 7 patients among the responders who had more than 5-month clinical follow-up. None of these patients developed CDI or obesity, or any new medical condition based on the available records to 3 y of maximal follow-up. They all remained below 70th percentile body mass index [BMI] during this period (Supplementary Figure 3).
Microbiome restoration differed between pediatric FMT responders and non-responders
Irrespective of adult donor fecal source, microbiota transplant significantly increased the Shannon index in pediatric CDI responders and non-CDI UC patients postFMT, whereas alpha-diversity in CDI non-responders remained unaltered (Figure 1A). However, the Shannon index of baseline PreFMT samples demonstrated large differences between CDI and non-CDI UC patients suggesting that therapy with C. difficile-directed antibiotics had significant impact on microbiome diversity in CDI patients. Further beta-diversity analysis demonstrated restoration of microbiome composition and function in pediatric rCDI responders, with the exception of patients P06 and P08 (Figure 1B). Diarrhea-resolved P06 and P08 were both younger patients with underlying conditions (Table 1) and remained dysbiotic even after two FMT procedures. Our analysis also demonstrated that CDI non-responders P03 (PreFMT) and P13 (PostFMT) had low dissimilarity distance scores compared with healthy controls even though both patients remained symptomatic (Figure 1B). Misdiagnosis/CDI independent diarrhea associated with sensitive PCR-based C. difficile toxin testing could explain these findings. Notably, metagenomic sequencing would have supported one case of clinical CDI misdiagnosis in one child (P03) who was later recognized to suffer from chronic constipation with overflow (paradoxical) diarrhea (Figure 2A). Exclusion of patient P03 from the microbiome analyses did not alter the study findings, demonstrating significant changes in microbiome community structure in FMT responders only (Supplementary Figure 4).
Figure 1. FMT promotes the reconstitution of microbiome composition and function, and alpha-diversity in rCDI responders.

(A) Shannon index of pediatric CDI and UC patients receiving identical donor material. (B) Beta-diversity analysis of microbiome composition (ASVs) and predicted function (PICRUSt2) using Bray-Curtis dissimilarity metric. Significance denotations: n.s., not significant; *, p < 0.05; ***, p < 0.001.
Figure 2. Successful microbiome reconstitution is highly conserved but age-dependent in pediatric rCDI recipients.

(A) Hierarchical clustering of family abundance highlights the reconstitution of conserved microbiome (box with dashed line) in pediatric rCDI responders. Notably, CDI-P3 (PreFMT) clustered with healthy controls suggesting potential C. difficile colonization rather than active infection. (B) Responder microbiomes of pediatric rCDI patients were similar to pediatric healthy controls. Bifidobacteriaceae expansion is a pediatric-specific microbiome feature in PostFMT samples when compared to adult donor microbiomes. Significance denotations: *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01; ***, p < 0.001.
Reconstitution of microbiome composition in pediatric rCDI responders
Hierarchical clustering analysis of family abundance profiles demonstrated consistent reconstitution of Bacteroidaceae, Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae, Bifidobacteriaceae and Erysipelotrichaceae which were significantly elevated in rCDI responders after FMT, similarly to age-matched healthy controls (Figure 2). We also observed that Enterobacteriaceae abundance decreased significantly postFMT in rCDI responders (Figure 2B). Interestingly, post-FMT Bifidobacteriaceae, Lachnospiraceae and Ruminococacceae in rCDI responders showed similar abundance with pediatric healthy controls, but were significantly higher than in adult donors (Figure 2B). Whereas Bacteroidaceae increased among FMT responders, this family remained significantly lower in abundance compared with the adult donors and was similar to healthy age-matched controls. These findings represent a previously unappreciated feature in pediatric rCDI recipients who receive FMT from an adult donor.
Enterobacteriaceae de-colonization is linked with augmented complex carbohydrate utilization
Enterobacteriaceae dominance is observed in treatment-native CDI patients, and remains high after C. difficile clearance before FMT (29). Our ASV-ASV correlation network analysis identified four dominant Enterobacteriaceae ASVs that demonstrated significant negative correlations with Bacteroidaceae, Lachnospiraceae, Ruminococcaceae associated with a healthy microbiome (Figure 3A). These dominant AVS’s accounted for over 95% abundance of Enterobacteriaceae and were largely absent in post FMT specimens (Figure 3B). Correlation analysis between ASV abundance and PICRUSt2 pathway abundance identified top significant hits for the degradation of complex carbohydrates including glycogen, starch and mannans that negatively correlated with decolonization of Enterobacteriaceae following FMT (Figure 3B). These pathways are highly abundant in healthy microbiota and are linked with short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production, which we have previously reported as being associated with restored microbiota function after successful FMT (30).
Figure 3. Decolonization of Enterobacteriaceae is associated with carbohydrate utilization of healthy dominant commensals engrafted in rCDI responders.

(A) ASV-ASV correlation network analysis highlights the strong negative correlation of four Enterobacteriaceae with healthy microbiota. (B) Four ASVs with diverse genera represented a major contributor of the Enterobacteriaceae abundance in pre-FMT specimens. (C) Enterobacteriaceae is negatively correlated (p < 0.001) with complex carbohydrate degradation of healthy microbiomes.
Discussion
This study represents the largest metagenomic investigation of microbiome restoration following FMT in pediatric rCDI with age-matched healthy and non-CDI UC patient controls. It also provides the longest clinical outcome information in pediatric rCDI patients following FMT. Utilization of an institutional stool bank providing shared/universal donors between recipient patients created a unique opportunity to evaluate microbiome restoration in both rCDI and UC after FMT. This approach decreased donor microbiome variation when characterizing donor-recipient interactions, compared with other FMT studies that utilized self-designated or commercial fecal donors. All FMT procedures in this study were performed within a two-year period, during which the universal donors did not change diet and had a stable BMI. Under such circumstances, fecal microbiomes from adult individuals are remarkably stable over time (31), in agreement with our findings in serial donor specimens that clustered closely over this investigational FMT study. Similar to others (11), we found FMT to be safe and highly effective in preventing CDI recurrence in pediatric patients without complicating clinical conditions. Moreover, similar to adult CDI patients receiving FMT (32–37), post-FMT microbiome diversity of pediatric CDI responders increased to a level comparable with healthy pediatric controls. Unlike antibiotic-induced gut dysbiosis in rCDI patients, PreFMT microbiome diversity remained high in non-CDI UC patients in clinical remission. As such, microbiome diversity may not be a good marker for evaluating FMT outcomes in non-CDI UC patients. We also found that microbiome shifts in antibiotic treated rCDI patients were larger after a single FMT than in UC patients without antibiotic exposure even though they received 22-30 FMTs. This finding shows that antibiotic pretreatment and/or recurrent CDI creates a more significant dysbiosis than UC during immunomodulatory-induced remission.
Our study also demonstrated that microbiome reconstitution is generally in agreement with FMT outcomes in rCDI patients without predisposing clinical conditions. This was not evident in patients with co-morbid conditions indicating that metagenomics alone is not suitable to predict disease outcomes of FMT in complicated pediatric rCDI patients. We found that diagnostic (21) and clinical (38) screening for rCDI prior to considering FMT is challenging in medically complex patients and the real-life cohort in this work represents the evolution of our program’s experience. Our findings indicate that microbiome analysis incorporating healthy age matched controls may help distinguish carrier/colonized states from true infections in select cases in the future (P03 in this case). Additionally, the observation that those patients who remained symptomatic during C. difficile directed antibiotic therapy were all non-responders is consistent with a prior report on pediatric FMT (12) and suggests that this criterion should be considered in the treatment paradigm of rCDI.
We also found increased abundance of Bifidobacteriaceae in pediatric rCDI patients postFMT, which has not been observed previously even in adult rCDI (33–37), but has been reported after FMT in healthy volunteers (39) and patients with hepatic encephalopathy (40). Furthermore, we demonstrated that taxonomic similarity in multiple bacterial families was closer between post-FMT responder and healthy age-matched control than donor microbiomes. This finding implicates the “enslapment” nature of FMT in children (41). Engraftment versus “enslapment” could not be directly examined in this study because of the lack of deep sequencing and requires further investigation, especially in regard to the expansion of SCFA-producing bacteria that can suppress C. difficile and Enterobacteriaceae growth via intracellular acidification (42). Butyrate (43,44) is protective against CDI in preclinical models and carbohydrate catabolism is a major SCFA producing pathway in healthy microbiomes (45).
“Non-responder” Patient P03 deserves further discussion since this case highlighted the clinical importance of addressing the possibility of paradoxical/overflow diarrhea in pediatric patients with complex conditions who are considered for FMT due to presumed rCDI. Current clinical diagnostic tests cannot distinguish between CDI and C. difficile colonization in children (21). Consequently, it is difficult to diagnose rCDI and we recently reported that up to 25% of pediatric FMT candidates may have alternative diagnoses, of which overflow diarrhea was the most common (38). Our finding herein that the pre-FMT microbiome of Patient P03 clustered with age-matched controls (Figures 2B and 3A) indicates that 16S-sequencing may aid in differentiating between patients with paradoxical (constipation-associated) diarrhea and C. difficile colonization versus rCDI. This conclusion will need confirmation in larger prospective studies.
Limitations include the small single-center, real-life study of pediatric rCDI patients receiving FMT. This indication, however, is thankfully rare in children making our cohort ‘sizable’, considering its single-center nature. Not all subjects submitted post-intervention stools around the same time-frame. Some of the subjects did not respond to anti-CDI treatment and one subject was found to have constipation raising concerns for colonization rather than true infection, making interpretation of data difficult. In spite of these limitations, our findings provide valuable information to practicing clinicians and microbiome investigators in respect to pediatric FMT outcomes, underscoring the need for cautious consideration when approaching medically-complex pediatric cases suffering from presumed rCDI.
The ultimate goal of microbiome-based therapeutic interventions is to identify disease-specific combinations with the most limited number of microbial species involved (46). A recurrent theme in metagenomic observations during FMT for rCDI is the recovery of Bacteroidaceae abundances in adults and children (8,15). Our findings support the notion that Bacteroidaceae may represent key protective members of the healthy microbiome and could form the basis for precision-therapy against rCDI (47,48). Finally, our findings newly implicate Bifidobacteriaceae as being associated with treatment success in pediatric rCDI, meriting further investigation as a model of age-dependent precision medicine. Bifidobacteria have a butyrogenic effect in the human colon (49) due to cross-feeding between other SCFA-producing colonic bacteria (50), supporting the notion that the butyrate-pathway may be an important target for microbial therapeutics in children.
Supplementary Material
Supplementary Figure 1. Flow chart of pediatric rCDI cohort with or without underlying gastrointestinal diseases, and microbiome comparisons with age-matched healthy pediatric subjects and UC patients. SOC: standard-of-care treatment with metronidazole and vancomycin. NAAT: nucleic acid amplification test.
Supplementary Figure 2. Schematic summary of patient outcomes and stool sampling.
Supplementary Figure 3. Body mass index (BMI) after FMT in pediatric rCDI responders. Patients with more than 4 month post-FMT BMI follow up are shown. None of these patients developed obesity (BMI > 95th centile).
Supplementary Figure 4. Separate statistical analyses for Shannon index (A) and Family relative abundance (B) after excluding patient P03.
What is Known
FMT is effective in treating CDI recurrence
FMT-derived microbiome reconstitution is common in rCDI responders compared with non-responders.
What is New
Careful clinical precautions should be taken when considering rCDI patients with co-morbidities for FMT
Post-FMT microbiome composition in medically complex (with co-morbidities) rCDI patients may not correlate with clinical outcomes
Post-FMT microbiome composition in non-complicated pediatric rCDI responders more closely represented age matched healthy controls than their respective adult donors
Expansion of Bifidobacteriaceae after FMT was unique to pediatric rCDI responders
Disclosure of Funding
This work was supported by Gutsy Kids Fund led by the Brock Wagner family, including philanthropic donations from the Klaasmeyer, Frugoni and other generous families. We are also grateful to the Houston Men of Distinction for their generous support. Additional funds including T32 DK007664-24S1, R01-AI10091401, DK096323, P30-DK56338, P01-AI152999 and U01-AI24290 obtained from the National Institutes of Health.
Conflicts of Interest
These authors disclose the following: T.C.S. received research funding from Merck, Nivalis, Cubist, Mead Johnson, Rebiotix, BioFire, Assembly BioSciences, and has served on the advisory board for Rebiotix and BioFire. R.J.S. provided consultancy for Nutrinia, IMHealth, and Biogaia AB, and received restricted research support from Mead-Johnson; J.V. received unrestricted research support from Biogaia AB (Stockholm, Sweden) and serves on the Scientific Advisory Boards of Biomica, Plexus Worldwide, and Seed Health; no study sponsors were involved in the design of the study, collection, analysis, or interpretation of the data, or the writing of the manuscript. The remaining authors disclose no conflicts.
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Associated Data
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Supplementary Materials
Supplementary Figure 1. Flow chart of pediatric rCDI cohort with or without underlying gastrointestinal diseases, and microbiome comparisons with age-matched healthy pediatric subjects and UC patients. SOC: standard-of-care treatment with metronidazole and vancomycin. NAAT: nucleic acid amplification test.
Supplementary Figure 2. Schematic summary of patient outcomes and stool sampling.
Supplementary Figure 3. Body mass index (BMI) after FMT in pediatric rCDI responders. Patients with more than 4 month post-FMT BMI follow up are shown. None of these patients developed obesity (BMI > 95th centile).
Supplementary Figure 4. Separate statistical analyses for Shannon index (A) and Family relative abundance (B) after excluding patient P03.
