Stopped: Temporarily on hold due to COVID-19 pandemic
Carbapenemase-producing Enterobacteriaceae (CPE) are bacteria carried in the gastrointestinal tract that are resistant to carbapenems, antibiotics of last resort. CPE infections result in death in 25-50% of cases. Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is the transfer of stool from a healthy donor to a recipient to alter the composition of gut microbes. Early studies support its use for eliminating CPE carriage but definitive studies are lacking. The investigators propose a feasibility pilot for a multicenter, non-blinded randomized trial comparing the effectiveness of FMT with no intervention (standard of care) in eliminating intestinal carriage of CPE. Forty patients with CPE will be randomly assigned to receive FMT by enema or no intervention. Feasibility will be demonstrated by the ability to recruit and retain 40 patients over 12 months, and to provide FMT made at a central site to at least one off-site hospital. The primary clinical endpoint for the full trial is CPE intestinal carriage 3 months after the intervention. Secondary endpoints include: CPE carriage at 1, 6 and 12 months; time to decolonization of CPE; safety; CPE infections over 12 months; and, intestinal carriage of other antibiotic-resistant organisms. Data on the clinical outcomes will be collected but not analyzed in this feasibility study.
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Incidence of intestinal colonization of patients with CPE 3 months after intervention.
Timeframe: 3 months
Randomization rate in study
Timeframe: 12 months
Proportion of patients retained in study for up to 6 months
Timeframe: 6 months