Gut microbiota diversity after autologous fecal microbiota transfer in acute myeloid leukemia patients

Author:

Malard FlorentORCID,Vekhoff Anne,Lapusan Simona,Isnard Francoise,D’incan-Corda Evelyne,Rey Jérôme,Saillard Colombe,Thomas Xavier,Ducastelle-Lepretre Sophie,Paubelle Etienne,Larcher Marie-Virginie,Rocher Clément,Recher ChristianORCID,Tavitian Suzanne,Bertoli SarahORCID,Michallet Anne-Sophie,Gilis Lila,Peterlin Pierre,Chevallier Patrice,Nguyen Stéphanie,Plantamura Emilie,Boucinha Lilia,Gasc Cyrielle,Michallet Mauricette,Dore Joel,Legrand Ollivier,Mohty Mohamad

Abstract

AbstractAcute myeloid leukemia (AML) intensive chemotherapy combined with broad-spectrum antibiotics, leads to gut microbiota dysbiosis promoting pathological conditions and an increased incidence of complications. Here we report findings from a phase II single-arm, multicenter study evaluating autologous fecal microbiota transfer (AFMT) in 25 AML patients treated with intensive chemotherapy and antibiotics (ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT02928523). The co-primary outcomes of the study are to evaluate the efficacy of AFMT in dysbiosis correction and multidrug-resistant bacteria eradication. The main secondary outcomes are to define a dysbiosis biosignature, to evaluate the effect of dysbiosis correction on patient clinical status, to assess the short and mid-term safety of AFMT in this immunocompromised population, and to evaluate the feasibility of the AFMT procedure and acceptability by the patient. Intensive induction chemotherapy induces a dramatic decrease of α-diversity indices, and a microbial dysbiosis with a significant shift of the microbial communities and domination of pro-inflammatory families. After AFMT treatment, α-diversity indices return to their initial mean levels and the similarity index shows the restoration of microbial communities. The trial meets pre-specified endpoints. AFMT appears to be safe and may be effective for gut microbiota restoration in AML patients receiving intensive chemotherapy and antibiotics, with an excellent gut microbiota reconstruction based on both richness and diversity indices at the species level.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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