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Assessment of clinical and microbiota responses to fecal microbial transplantation in adult horses with diarrhea.

Caroline Ann McKinneyDaniela BedeniceAna P PachecoBruno C M OliveiraMary-Rose ParadisMelissa MazanGiovanni Widmer
Published in: PloS one (2021)
As expected, healthy horses at both locations showed a greater α-diversity and lower β-diversity compared to horses with colitis. The fecal microbiome of healthy horses clustered by location, with L1 horses showing a higher prevalence of Kiritimatiellaeota. Improved manure consistency (lower diarrhea score) was associated with a greater α-diversity in horses with colitis at both locations (L1: r = -0.385, P = 0.006; L2: r = -0.479, P = 0.002). Fecal transplant recipients demonstrated a greater overall reduction in diarrhea score (median: 4±3 grades), compared to untreated horses (median: 1.5±3 grades, P = 0.021), with a higher incidence in day-over-day improvement in diarrhea (22/36 (61%) vs. 10/28 (36%) instances, P = 0.011). When comparing microbiota of diseased horses at study conclusion to that of healthy controls, FMT-treated horses showed a lower mean UniFrac distance (0.53±0.27) than untreated horses (0.62±0.26, P<0.001), indicating greater normalization of the microbiome in FMT-treated patients.
Keyphrases
  • newly diagnosed
  • microbial community
  • chronic kidney disease
  • stem cells
  • ejection fraction
  • end stage renal disease
  • clostridium difficile
  • bone marrow
  • patient reported outcomes
  • cell therapy
  • childhood cancer