Youngster et al. [24] |
A prospective study |
180 using oral frozen capsules |
CDI resolved in 82% of patients after a single treatment, rising to a 91% cure rate with two treatments. |
Three cases of Grade 2 or above adverse reactions deemed related to the FMT were reported: One transient high fever, two new endoscopic diagnoses of ulcerative colitis. |
Furuya-Kanamori et al. [25] |
A collaborative analysis of patient data from 14 studies |
305 (207 by lower and 98 by upper gastrointestinal route) |
Risk of clinical failure was 5.6% and 17.9% in those treated by upper gastrointestinal route, and 4.9% and 8.5% in those treated by lower gastrointestinal route at Day 30 and 90, respectively. |
Not reported. |
Liu et al. [26] |
Single center retrospective data |
25 procedures (via feeding tube (n = 11), upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (n = 8), or colonoscopy (n = 6) in 24 patients) |
Symptoms resolved in 21 of 24 patients (87.5%). Three patients who did not respond underwent a second FMT and all three responded |
No serious adverse reactions were attributed to FMT. |
Ponte et al. [27] |
Single center retrospective study |
34 (via upper gastrointestinal endoscopy (n = 30) or colonoscopy (n = 4) |
Cure after one FMT in 22/25 (88%) and after two or more FMT in another 2/25 (8%). |
No serious adverse reactions were reported. |
Kelly et al. [28] |
FMT National Registry Data |
222 had follow-up at 1 month and 123 at 6 months. |
90% cure rate at 1 month and 96% cure rate at 6 months. |
At 1 month, 1% had hospitalization for diarrhea and severe abdominal pain, felt probably related to FMT; at 6 months, 1% developed irritable bowel syndrome and 1% inflammatory bowel disease. |