1. Vaginal microbiome transplantation in women with intractable bacterial vaginosis
- Author
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Hagit Shapiro, Allon E. Moses, Uria Mor, Simcha Yagel, Debra Goldman-Wohl, Eran Elinav, Jacob Strahilevitz, Mally Dori-Bachash, Avner Leshem, Yotam Cohen, and Ahinoam Lev-Sagie
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,medicine.disease ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Clinical trial ,Transplantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Remission induction ,030104 developmental biology ,0302 clinical medicine ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Vaginal fluid ,Vaginal microbiome ,Medicine ,Bacterial vaginosis ,business ,Adverse effect - Abstract
We report the results of a first exploratory study testing the use of vaginal microbiome transplantation (VMT) from healthy donors as a therapeutic alternative for patients suffering from symptomatic, intractable and recurrent bacterial vaginosis (ClinicalTrials.gov NCT02236429 ). In our case series, five patients were treated, and in four of them VMT was associated with full long-term remission until the end of follow-up at 5-21 months after VMT, defined as marked improvement of symptoms, Amsel criteria, microscopic vaginal fluid appearance and reconstitution of a Lactobacillus-dominated vaginal microbiome. One patient presented with incomplete remission in clinical and laboratory features. No adverse effects were observed in any of the five women. Notably, remission in three patients necessitated repeated VMT, including a donor change in one patient, to elicit a long-standing clinical response. The therapeutic efficacy of VMT in women with intractable and recurrent bacterial vaginosis should be further determined in randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials.
- Published
- 2019
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