Michael Harrop
Active member
- Format correct?
- Yes
Anything other than "for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animal".Most of our donors will remain available at the current price, but not for the purpose of FMT".
what are they available for now?
I have no idea how viable the fermented food avenue is, nor in what countries. Even though the supplement market is largely unregulated, I think there are still GMP requirements. I haven't looked into it because I think it's very far from ideal and should be a last resort.I saw the potential avenue of human-fermented food, but that seems like a future avenue and also not
viable for all countries?
My brain function is quite poor. Do you think you're capable of writing such a summary?Something like:
In its entirety, this should be less than a page.
Got it, thanks!Anything other than "for the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease in man or other animal".
Yes. I will take a stab at this when I have a free moment. I'll send it your way when I'm done.My brain function is quite poor. Do you think you're capable of writing such a summary?
My suggestions would be for people to contact news organizations, legislators, and regulatory agencies. You can share the blogs with them. I think most of them would agree that if no entity is going to work to provide this simple treatment for us, we should be allowed to work to acquire it ourselves.
Federal too! https://forum.humanmicrobiome.info/threads/the-fda-and-fmt-regulation-mar-2024-humanmicrobes-org.303/post-1202Legislators
Congressman
- You can reach out to each of your state's representatives
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Maybe a podcast and get like a masters journalism student to do it as a project. It is easier to remain anonymous when only using your voice?That's an interesting idea. It could be helpful. The downsides I see are that it would take up a good amount of my time (which is still mostly dedicated to screening huge amounts of donor applications pouring in), and making videos like that is definitely not my expertise, and most donors & recipients want to remain anonymous.
My suggestions would be for people to contact news organizations, legislators, and regulatory agencies. You can share the blogs with them. I think most of them would agree that if no entity is going to work to provide this simple treatment for us, we should be allowed to work to acquire it ourselves.
Feel free to contact them. I do a lit review every day, and I've contacted hundreds of researchers. The vast majority do not respond. They don't appear to care at all; they're just doing their job, getting paid, and going home.Since you have screened the donors already it would just be a follow-on study seeing if donors based on a different selection criteria improve results.
The only thing companies seem interested in is making "drugs" from poop; not actual FMT, much less FMT from high-quality donors.The last option too is find a biomedical research company who may be up for doing the FMT experiment.
#3 and #4 are not up to the FDA, as far as I know. It would be up to federal legislators to provide monetary incentives, or perhaps create a unique FMT project (maybe something similar to the $1 billion COVID moonshot proposal). I think a very good argument could be made that the chronic disease crisis deserves a Manhattan-Project-like clone, with a primary focus on the gut microbiome and FMT.3. Encouraging clinical trials with top donors: We call on the FDA to support partnerships and funding for clinical trials comparing the safety and efficacy of Human Microbes’ top donors against the average FMT donors being used worldwide. This would provide critical data and further legitimize FMT as a viable treatment option.
4. Supporting research to clear the microbiome: We need funding and partnerships for animal and human studies to explore methods for clearing the existing microbiome. This research could open new doors for gut health treatments and further improve patient outcomes.
Sure! You can email me about that.Im pretty familiar with those platforms, I could help with that if you’d like.
I could address it to federal legislators or just the general public to raise awareness.
Its truly mind boggling.In my experience, the general public is even less informed & motivated.
Will do.
We do not invest in research studies or clinical trials at the request of private individuals, nor do we award funding to private individuals.
NIH does not set up research collaborations, so you'd have to write to researchers who work in your area(s) of interest.
This is a huge part of what I'm doing, so I don't think that makes sense.that we first need to figure out the optimal way to technically carry out a FMT (including, but certainly NOT limited to, donor criteria)
If you mean a new one, other than Openbiome, will you be posting to the Clinics section about it?I have tried capsules from three donors so far on my own (one from Human Microbes, two from another source)
What is "a project like this"? In other words, who gets to decide who the recipients are, what the inclusion/exclusion criteria are for people being treated, and analyzes the results (including determining what counts as a "success" or doesn't? What route of administration will be tested? As someone on the autism spectrum, I contacted the ASU team that is running clinical trials for adults, about whether I could enroll, and they said they had far more interest than they had spots in the trials for people.This is a huge part of what I'm doing, so I don't think that makes sense.
I'll reference the 4 bullet points I listed in this previous comment that lay out what I'm asking for.
Regarding your 3rd paragraph, no, that's not what I have in mind. I discussed that previously in this thread. I reference those 4 bullet points again as well. I do not think any company is going to spend lots of money on finding stool donors since a stool donor can't be patented. That's a huge part of the reason why there needs to be government or philanthropic funding for a project like this.
About "my idea"? What these people need to do is all convey to the FDA how much FMT helped them. Something along the lines of signing a petition, along with the opportunity for individual stories.I've never argued for the FDA to "freely allow FMT" either. That would be horrible and I've argued against that for many years.
I think your 4th paragraph is way off base as well, and it appears that you didn't read, or remember, what I wrote on the blogs. In particular, the second to last paragraph of the blog this thread is about.
I don't think you need multiple patients who've benefitted from a super-donor in order to make progress. There is ample evidence and rationale for why the government, the public research system, and philanthropists should back FMT and a project like this. And it's all laid out in the blogs.
However, there are a good number of those people whose experiences I've been trying to catalog in the "personal donors" section. They went back to living a normal life. They're not spending time trying to help anyone else get access to FMT. But you're welcome to try to get in contact with them about your idea.
I will eventually. I was going to wait until I was fully through trying all they have to offer. Unfortunately though, they have stopped shipment to the US at least for the time being due to customs concerns (there's another concrete place where regulations could change for the better). So I might not be able to try them any more and might just need to report the experiences I've already had, for the benefit of the non-US patients who can still order from them. They're not a clinic, they're another mail order business.If you mean a new one, other than Openbiome, will you be posting to the Clinics section about it?
As is, this project has been all-inclusive. When going the clinical trial route we'd have to pick one condition per trial. It really depends on how the clinical trial comes to be. Using your autism example, if the remaining people wanting to get into the ASU trial want to start up a new crowdfunding effort to get another trial going then we'd pick autism.What is "a project like this"? In other words, who gets to decide who the recipients are, what the inclusion/exclusion criteria are for people being treated, and analyzes the results (including determining what counts as a "success" or doesn't? What route of administration will be tested?
Yes, it seems that there is ample demand for FMT clinical trials, and we may be able to crowdfund another one. I just have no clue how to go about such a thing, and no one has volunteered to help.I contacted the ASU team that is running clinical trials for adults, about whether I could enroll, and they said they had far more interest than they had spots in the trials for people.
As I noted in my previous comment, NIH doesn't fund or even help projects like this. So there's a huge gap in coverage, and we see that glaringly with this project -- it takes on an extremely important need that has been ignored for decades, it's illegal for us to do on our own, and there's no official way to get support and funding. Thus, it's up to legislators to recognize and fix this major deficiency.This doesn't sound like something you'd ask legislators to do. This is something you'd either put on Kickstarter or else apply for funding from a funding agency like NIH, which it seems you have already done. Legislators make regulations, and assign funding to government departments, who then spend it according to their mandates. They don't fund friends' (or even less, strangers') pet projects with taxpayer money--they would be seen as crooked and corrupt if they did this.
None of this is correct. Please review previous information before engaging in discussion. This has all been covered already.Why? This is just asking for trouble. You say below that you never advocated that the FDA "freely allow FMT", but this is far more along those lines than even anything I would propose. It would be great if the FDA allowed FMT for far more conditions, i.e. allowed it to be used "off label" much like prescription drugs. But you don't want to advocate people preparing FMT in their bathrooms using potentially non-sterile equipment and sending it to doctors! And I don't think many doctors would agree to that either. The only sustainable solution is a lab that accepts stool and processes it, hopefully nonprofit and that hopefully also takes care of testing so neither the donor nor the doctor have to concern themselves with that.
- The FDA to drop the GMP/lab requirements and allow donors to ship their stool directly to doctors.
I would assume the FDA is aware of such stories already. I highly doubt it would have any impact. But as I said, you're welcome to try to contact them and persuade them to do something.About "my idea"? What these people need to do is all convey to the FDA how much FMT helped them. Something along the lines of signing a petition, along with the opportunity for individual stories.
Katrina Ray
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Chief Ed - Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology
"Do not do DIY #FMT at home" is extremely ignorant and privileged. Many of us would be dead had we not. Furthermore, the research community is not addressing the donor quality issue or making high-quality donors available, so we don't have other options. https://forum.humanmicrobiome.info/threads/the-fda-and-fmt-regulation-part-2-jul-2024-humanmicrobes-org-i-met-wit.520/#post-1370
Please consider writing a story about this so we can get partnerships, funding, and clinical trials. https://forum.humanmicrobiome.info/threads/the-fda-and-fmt-regulation-part-2-jul-2024-humanmicrobes-org-i-met-wit.520/#post-1370