Recently posted by someone in another FMT group.
https://www.cell.com/cell/abstract/S0092-8674(25)00564-1
"Fecal microbiota transplant (FMT) is an increasingly used intervention, but its suitability to restore regional gut microbiota,
particularly in the small bowel (SB), must be questioned because of its
predominant anaerobic composition."
The first time I've seen someone raise this point...
Clearly from some of our experiences FMT
can work for non-colon diseases, but many of us have had trouble repeating our successes and I suspect this could be a big part of why. So alongside FMT, alternative ways of transferring microbiota that don't use stool as a source (or change its composition through processing) need to be looked into.
Good to see that you saw this too--for some reason it wasn't showing up before when I was looking at the latest posts in the studies forum to see if someone else already posted it.
What I take away from this is NOT that upper route is more dangerous than lower route, but rather than quite possibly stool isn't the optimal source
at all for healthy small intestinal microbes, no matter HOW it is administered. I was starting to suspect that myself, but it was reassuring to see that someone else had actually done some research that was pointing in the same direction.
That paper I posted earlier this year from an Australian group began to suggest that possibly even the mucosa in the healthy
colon isn't as anaerobe-dominated as it was thought to be, and that some of its constituents are not well-represented in stool, and I had
speculated in response that this mismatch was likely even greater vs. the small intestine--but here's a study that actually looked directly into that.
So looking into other ways of getting more small intestine-typical microbes is important, as well as possibly shifting the composition of stool-derived microbiota by means of processing. I am curious if part of the reason my OpenBiome FMT worked so much better than anything since was that I was pre-treated with vancomycin, and that some traces of this still in my gut on the day of the transplant (I was off it for < 48 hours) knocked back some of the excess colonic anaerobes from the transplant.