Some excerpts from the article that are interesting. I am against using antibiotics but this article did show some promising evidence that they could help with engraftment. Also interesting, is using multiple routes of delivery helps engraftment as well. I encourage you to read the article and check out the graphs. Very interesting information here.
Together, these data confirm that the extent of donor microbiome engraftment is variable and influenced by pre-FMT donor–recipient relatedness.
Indeed, route of delivery emerged as the variable most significantly associated with strain engraftment also in univariate testing (P = 0.0093; Fig. 2b). So far, no consensus exists as to a recommended route of administration in FMT protocols40 and, whereas our results suggest that combined routes increase the engraftment likelihood, the observation is based on only four studies adopting this approach.
Importantly, intake of antibiotics (14 studies with antibiotic intake before FMT, 10 without) and disease category (12 studies on infectious diseases, 12 on noninfectious) were significantly associated with strain engraftment in cohorts that employed a single administration route (n = 19 datasets, permutation test antibiotics treatment and infectious disease versus no antibiotics and noninfectious disease, P = 0.027), and both were associated with the first two PLS components while being highly correlated with each other (Supplementary Fig. 6; Methods).
the presence of a species after the transplant is dictated primarily by the amount (or absence) in the donor and in the recipient as well as taxonomy and general prevalence.
Our results provide further support for administering FMT by combined routes and including antibiotic preconditioning in FMT working protocols to increase donor microbiome engraftment, even though the potential side effects of antibiotic treatments for noninfectious diseases59 should be considered.
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