June 13, 2014
By Medical Discovery News
Antibiotic resistance among disease-causing bacteria is a growing and dangerous problem. Bacteria resistant to one or antibiotics, like Staph and Strep, are approaching catastrophic levels. Bacteria so resistant to common antibiotics that few if any drugs are available to treat them have been dubbed superbugs. One widely feared bacterium, called Clostridium difficle or C. diff for short, causes intestinal disease so severe that it can become life-threatening. It kills almost 15,000 Americans every year, mostly the elderly. Super-resistant forms of this microbe are almost impossible to treat with antibiotics.
This bacterium produces a powerful toxin that destroys intestinal cells and can rupture small blood vessels. It also causes abnormal intestinal behavior, mainly excess water that produces diarrhea. It’s an unpleasant and painful prospect for those infected with C. diff.
Roughly 5-15 percent of the population carries this bacterium in their digestive system naturally, but it is kept in check by the rest of the bacterial population. But an underlying disease, antibiotics, another infection, or chemotherapy can weaken bacterial systems, allowing C. diff to expand into an infection. And a super-resistant version of C. diff can be a real problem.
As gross as it may sound, fecal transplants are getting lots of attention as an option for C. diff infections. First tried in the late 1950s, the rationale for this approach is that the disease occurs because the bacterial populations are disrupted, so providing a source of normal bacteria restores the ecology of the intestine and prevents C. diff from growing.
Where exactly does one find fecal matter for such a transplant? It’s not as if anyone wants to ask family or friends to share their poop. Actually, there are major regulatory obstacles for fecal transplants. For instance, the fecal source must test negative for disease-causing bacteria, viruses, and parasites. Basically, it’s not something anyone can find at Whole Foods or on Amazon.
So a group of enterprising graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) who observed a friend’s struggle with C. diff formed a company to distribute safe, certified fecal matter for transplant. OpenBiome collects, tests, and distributes fecal matter like a blood bank distributes blood. Samples are certified by Food and Drug Administration (FDA) procedures, which cost about $3,000. Then they are frozen at super-cold temperatures (-112 degrees) and shipped to hospitals and physicians. Currently, the company operates as a nonprofit and only collects a shipping and processing fee for transplant material.
We already know that our normal bacterial systems, which together make up our microbiome, help protect us from skin, urogenital, and oral diseases. Changes in our microbiome may also contribute to an underlying disease like diabetes. There is still much to be discovered about these organisms that call our bodies home, especially since we house 10 times more microbes than our own cells!
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