FDA Halts Fecal Transplant Trials After Patient Dies

A patient who received a fecal transplant died after the procedure — prompting the FDA to put a halt to a number of fecal transplant trials.

Deadly Infection

Fecal transplants are experimental procedures in which doctors use stool from a healthy donor to treat a person whose own microbiome has been thrown off balance.

The procedure has shown significant promise for treating various health issues. But now an immuno-compromised patient who received a fecal transplant for an undisclosed reason has died following the procedure and another is seriously ill — prompting the Food and Drug Administration to put a halt to a number of fecal transplant trials.

Screening Stool

According to a New York Times story, both patients received fecal transplants from the same donor. After they fell ill, the researchers conducting the trial tested the donor’s samples and found it contained E. coli bacteria that produced an antibiotic-resistant enzyme.

Peter Marks, director of the FDA’s Center for Biologics Evaluation and Research, told The Times that the agency was halting an undisclosed number of clinical trials until the researchers leading them prove they have screening procedures in place to ensure donated stool doesn’t contain dangerous organisms.

READ MORE: Fecal Transplant Is Linked to a Patient’s Death, the F.D.A. Warns [The New York Times]

More on fecal transplants: Fecal Transplants See Success in 90 Percent of Bacterial Gut Infections

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