Abstract
The success of fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) programs depends on maintaining suitable stool donors. We describe challenges recruiting and retaining universal donors in the first 2 years of an FMT clinical and research program in Toronto and identify opportunities for improvement. A four-stage screening process is used to identify suitable FMT donors in the Microbiota Therapeutics Outcomes Program. Donor screening follows Health Canada recommendations and excludes persons with history or risk for diseases associated with dysbiosis. Donors are rescreened microbiologically approximately every 1-3 months and answer ongoing health, exposure, and dietary questionnaires. In the first 2 years of our program, 5 of 322 (1.6%) prospective stool donors passed initial screening, and only 2 (0.6%) were retained. Most prospective donors were excluded on telephone screening, at which point high BMI, medication use, and family history of relevant illness were common exclusions. No candidate was excluded because of a concerning physical examination. Microbiologic reasons for donor exclusion included carriage of Blastocystis hominis (n = 2), Helicobacter pylori (n = 2), extended spectrum beta-lactamase producing organisms (n = 1), Shiga-toxin producing Escherichia coli (n = 1), and sapovirus (n = 1). Universal donors were lost temporarily because of travel, antibiotic exposures, and transient carriage of antibiotic-resistant organisms. Recruiting and retaining suitable donors for FMT is challenging because of rigorous exclusions and labour-intensive screening processes. We present considerations for efficiency in donor screening, including targeting recruitment populations, expanded website self-screening, eliminating physical examinations, and streamlining post-travel risk assessment.
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More From: Official Journal of the Association of Medical Microbiology and Infectious Disease Canada
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