Impact of a Purified Microbiome Therapeutic on Abundance of Antimicrobial Resistance Genes in Patients With Recurrent Clostridioides difficile Infection

Author:

Straub Timothy J1,Lombardo Mary-Jane1,Bryant Jessica A1,Diao Liyang1,Lodise Thomas P2ORCID,Freedberg Daniel E3,Wortman Jennifer R1,Litcofsky Kevin D1,Hasson Brooke R1,McGovern Barbara H1ORCID,Ford Christopher B1,Henn Matthew R1

Affiliation:

1. Seres Therapeutics , Cambridge, Massachusetts , USA

2. Albany College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences , Albany, New York , USA

3. Division of Digestive and Liver Diseases, Columbia University Irving Medical Center–New York Presbyterian Hospital , New York, New York , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background The gastrointestinal microbiota is an important line of defense against colonization with antimicrobial resistant (AR) bacteria. In this post hoc analysis of the phase 3 ECOSPOR III trial, we assessed impact of a microbiota-based oral therapeutic (fecal microbiota spores, live; VOWST Oral Spores [VOS], formerly SER-109]; Seres Therapeutics) compared with placebo, on AR gene (ARG) abundance in patients with recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection (rCDI). Methods Adults with rCDI were randomized to receive VOS or placebo orally for 3 days following standard-of-care antibiotics. ARG and taxonomic profiles were generated using whole metagenomic sequencing of stool at baseline and weeks 1, 2, 8, and 24 posttreatment. Results Baseline (n = 151) and serial posttreatment stool samples collected through 24 weeks (total N = 472) from 182 patients (59.9% female; mean age: 65.5 years) in ECOSPOR III as well as 68 stool samples obtained at a single time point from a healthy cohort were analyzed. Baseline ARG abundance was similar between arms and significantly elevated versus the healthy cohort. By week 1, there was a greater decline in ARG abundance in VOS versus placebo (P = .003) in association with marked decline of Proteobacteria and repletion of spore-forming Firmicutes, as compared with baseline. We observed abundance of Proteobacteria and non–spore-forming Firmicutes were associated with ARG abundance, while spore-forming Firmicutes abundance was negatively associated. Conclusions This proof-of-concept analysis suggests that microbiome remodeling with Firmicutes spores may be a potential novel approach to reduce ARG colonization in the gastrointestinal tract.

Funder

Seres Therapeutics

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Microbiology (medical)

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