A273 A PILOT PROSPECITVE, MULTI-CENTRE, RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL COMPARING FECAL MICROBIOTA TRANSPLANTATION (FMT) TO PLACEBO AT INDUCING REMISSION IN MILD TO MODERATE CROHN'S DISEASE
K Wong, D Kao, H Jijon, R Franz, N Narula, F Peerani, C Turbide, K Kroeker, P Moayyedi, K Madsen

TL;DR
This study tested whether fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) could induce remission in mild to moderate Crohn's disease but found no significant benefit compared to placebo.
Contribution
The study is the first randomized controlled trial to evaluate FMT for inducing remission in Crohn's disease using a specific FMT regimen.
Findings
FMT did not achieve clinical and endoscopic remission in Crohn's disease patients at week 8.
Only 12.5% of FMT responders and 28.6% of placebo non-responders achieved remission after open-label FMT.
The trial was limited by small sample size and recruitment challenges during the pandemic.
Abstract
FMT has shown promise at inducing remission in ulcerative colitis. The effect of FMT on inducing remission in Crohn’s disease however remains unknown. To evaluate the efficacy of FMT at inducing remission in mild-to-moderate Crohn’s disease This double-blind, randomized, trial conducted at 3 Canadian academic centers (Edmonton, Hamilton and Calgary) randomized. Adult patients with mild-to-moderate Crohn’s disease with modified Harvey Bradshaw Index (mHBI) score of ampersand:003E5 and at least one objective measure of inflammation (CRP ≥ 8mg/L or fecal calprotectin (FCP) ≥ 250 ug/g) on stable dosing of concomitant therapy were assigned to FMT or placebo. First assigned treatment was by colonoscopy followed by 20 [DK1] capsules weekly for 7 weeks. Endoscopic severity (SES-CD) was assessed at baseline during colonoscopic delivery of assigned treatment and at week 8 by a blinded central…
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Taxonomy
TopicsClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens research · Microscopic Colitis · Inflammatory Bowel Disease
