Ruszkowski Jakub, Kachlik Zofia, Walaszek Michał, Storman Dawid, Podkowa Karolina, Garbarczuk Paweł, Jemioło Paweł, Łyzińska Weronika, Nowakowska Katarzyna, Grych Konrad, Dębska-Ślizień Alicja M
Department of Nephrology, Transplantology and Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland.
Student Scientific Circle at the Department of Nephrology, Transplantology and Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Medical University of Gdańsk, Gdańsk, Poland.
J Transl Med. 2025 Jun 17;23(1):662. doi: 10.1186/s12967-025-06645-6.
Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) from humans with specific medical conditions to animal models can demonstrate causality by inducing or exacerbating pathophenotypes, linking the gut microbiota to health outcomes.
We conducted a scoping review searching MEDLINE, EMBASE, Scopus, and Web of Science through July 2024 to identify human noninfectious diseases studied using FMT in animal models, investigate FMT methodologies, and assess the feasibility of systematic reviews on the role of the microbiota in specific diseases.
From 605 reports of 489 studies, we found that inflammatory bowel diseases, irritable bowel syndrome, obesity, colorectal cancer, and depression were the most commonly studied, with cancer research focusing on immunotherapy non-responsiveness. In a random sample of studies, gastrointestinal outcomes were most frequently reported, with remarkably high rates (> 80%) of successful induction of disease-specific alterations for intestinal barrier function, gastrointestinal inflammation, circulating immune parameters, and fecal metabolites. Most studies used C57BL/6 mice and oral gavage administration, with recipients being either germ-free or antibiotic-pretreated. We created tables linking conditions with publications to facilitate future systematic reviews.
Although human-to-animal FMT studies cover diverse conditions, methodological heterogeneity and inconsistent reporting hinder comparability. Standardized protocols and guidelines are needed. For several conditions, sufficient literature exists to assess the role of the gut microbiota in human health through systematic reviews.
将患有特定疾病的人的粪便微生物群移植(FMT)到动物模型中,可以通过诱导或加剧病理表型来证明因果关系,将肠道微生物群与健康结果联系起来。
我们进行了一项范围综述,检索截至2024年7月的MEDLINE、EMBASE、Scopus和科学网,以确定在动物模型中使用FMT研究的人类非传染性疾病,研究FMT方法,并评估关于微生物群在特定疾病中作用的系统综述的可行性。
从489项研究的605份报告中,我们发现炎症性肠病、肠易激综合征、肥胖症、结直肠癌和抑郁症是研究最频繁的疾病,癌症研究集中在免疫治疗无反应性方面。在随机抽取的研究样本中,胃肠道结果报告最为频繁,肠道屏障功能、胃肠道炎症、循环免疫参数和粪便代谢物的疾病特异性改变的成功诱导率非常高(>80%)。大多数研究使用C57BL/6小鼠并采用口服灌胃给药,受体为无菌小鼠或经过抗生素预处理的小鼠。我们创建了将疾病与出版物联系起来的表格,以方便未来的系统综述。
尽管人对动物的FMT研究涵盖了多种疾病,但方法的异质性和报告的不一致性阻碍了可比性。需要标准化的方案和指南。对于几种疾病,已有足够的文献通过系统综述来评估肠道微生物群在人类健康中的作用。