View clinical trials related to Fecal Microbiota Transplant.
Filter by:A national data registry of patients receiving fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) or other gut-related-microbiota products designed to prospectively assess short and long-term safety and effectiveness. Neonates will not be enrolled at any site for this study. The study data will derive from patient and donors past and present medical records, research records, and records about phone calls made as part of this research. The patient data will also be used from the records on visits.
Recurrent Clostridioides difficle infection (rCDI) is a very significant problem in its own right and current fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) -based therapeutics will benefit from their optimization for this indication. It is likely that appropriate nutritional support coupled with microbiota-based drugs will yield superior clinical outcomes. However, both diet and gut microbiome are very complex. This project, which is based on a wealth of FMT experience, both clinical and investigational, over the past decade along with the novel techniques developed to identify dietary patterns and food groups that explain the most variation in gut microbiome, offers an ideal platform for performing systematic research in nutritional support that promotes gut microbiota health. The purpose is to Generate preliminary data with regards to tolerability of the Microbiota enhancing and nourishing diet (MEND) and its effects on the fecal microbiota in rCDI patients following FMT with the goal of developing larger clinical trials aimed to optimize post-FMT dietary management.
The researchers intend to prospectively study the safety, clinical efficacy and microbial outcomes in patients with recently diagnosed UC with FMT capsule therapy derived from pre-defined donors. Donors will be specifically screened for Fusobacterium and Sutterella species as well as for global diversity. It is unknown if treatment with antibiotics before FMT improves the engraftment and/or efficacy of FMT in UC, therefore the researchers plan to randomize subjects to receive pre-treatment with antibiotics or not before FMT therapy. The research team enroll patients from The Susan and Leonard Feinstein IBD Center and our established early diagnosis clinic at Mount Sinai Hospital (MSH).
There is a growing body of evidence indicating the significant contribution of the gut microbiome to host health and disease. Furthermore, it has been shown that exercise may modify the microbiome composition. The diversity of athletes' gut microbiome was found higher compared to gender and age-matched controls. However, important mechanistic questions related to the possible associations between exercise and the human gut microbiome remain unanswered. In this study, we propose to investigate using advanced state-of-the-art measurements of physical activity level and related metabolic parameters whether there is a connection between the microbiome and physical abilities in healthy participants and whether antibiotics consumption can influence host physical abilities and glycemic responses through changes induced in microbiome composition and function.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the effectiveness of Fecal Microbiota Transplant (FMT) treatment in high-risk acute graft-versus-host disease (GVHD). This research study involves an experimental intervention called FMT.
Adolescent autism spectrum disorder subjects with associated GI symptoms will be randomized to receive oral dosing of CP101 capsules in Treatment Group I or matching placebo capsules in Treatment Group II. The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of CP101 in subjects with ASD and associated GI symptoms.