Department of Medicine, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
Division of Gastroenterology, Brigham and Women's Hospital/Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Gut Microbes. 2020;11(1):51-62. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2019.1611153. Epub 2019 May 23.
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a highly effective therapy for recurrent Clostridioides difficile infection. Stool donors are essential, but difficult to recruit and retain. We aimed to identify factors influencing willingness to donate stool. This multi-center study with a 32-item questionnaire targeted young adults and health care workers via social media and university email lists in Edmonton and Kingston, Canada; London and Nottingham, England; and Indianapolis and Boston, USA. Items included baseline demographics and FMT knowledge and perception. Investigated motivators and deterrents included economic compensation, screening process, time commitment, and stool donation logistics. Logistic regression and linear regression models estimated associations of study variables with self-assessed willingness to donate stool. 802 respondents completed our questionnaire: 387 (48.3%) age 21-30 years, 573 (71.4%) female, 323 (40%) health care workers. Country of residence, age and occupation were not associated with willingness to donate stool. Factors increasing willingness to donate were: already a blood donor (OR 1.64), male, altruism, economic benefit, knowledge of how FMT can help patients (OR 1.32), and positive attitudes towards FMT (OR 1.39). Factors decreasing willingness to donate were: stool collection unpleasant (OR 0.92), screening process invasive (OR 0.92), higher stool donation frequency, negative social perception of stool, and logistics of collection/transporting feces. We conclude that 1) blood donors and males are more willing to consider stool donation; 2) altruism, economic compensation, and positive feedback are motivators; and 3) screening process, high donation frequency, logistics of collection/transporting feces, lack of public awareness, and negative social perception are deterrents. Considering these variables could maximize donor recruitment and retention.
粪便微生物群移植(FMT)是治疗复发性艰难梭菌感染的一种非常有效的疗法。供体粪便对于 FMT 至关重要,但招募和保留供体粪便存在困难。本研究旨在确定影响捐赠意愿的因素。本项多中心研究采用 32 项问卷调查表,通过社交媒体和加拿大埃德蒙顿及金斯顿、英国伦敦和诺丁汉、以及美国印第安纳波利斯和波士顿的大学电子邮件列表,向年轻人和医务人员发放问卷。调查内容包括基本人口统计学信息、FMT 知识和认知。调查的动机和阻碍因素包括经济补偿、筛查过程、时间投入和粪便捐赠物流。采用逻辑回归和线性回归模型,评估研究变量与自我评估捐赠意愿之间的相关性。802 名受访者完成了我们的问卷:387 名(48.3%)年龄在 21-30 岁之间,573 名(71.4%)女性,323 名(40%)医务人员。居住国家、年龄和职业与捐赠意愿无关。增加捐赠意愿的因素包括:已经是献血者(比值比 1.64)、男性、利他主义、经济利益、了解 FMT 如何帮助患者(比值比 1.32)和对 FMT 的积极态度(比值比 1.39)。降低捐赠意愿的因素包括:粪便采集不愉快(比值比 0.92)、筛查过程有创(比值比 0.92)、较高的粪便捐赠频率、对粪便的负面社会认知以及收集/运输粪便的物流问题。综上,我们得出以下结论:1)献血者和男性更愿意考虑捐赠粪便;2)利他主义、经济补偿和积极反馈是激励因素;3)筛查过程、高捐赠频率、收集/运输粪便的物流问题、缺乏公众意识和负面社会认知是阻碍因素。考虑到这些变量,可以最大限度地提高供体招募和保留率。