MaximilianKohler
Established Member
I'm not in disagreement, just a little confused how these factual statements relate to what was quoted.Just because something is published, does not necessarily make it true. Even peer-reviewed science isn't necessarily 'true' nor should it always be taken as fact.
There can be flaws in methodology, or a lack of follow-up, or a failure to publish negative or null results.
Getting this large-scale RCT done is exactly what this thread is about. So how do we get it?I'm not yet convinced that the science behind FMT is there. We need large-scale RCTs with objective, consistent and reliable measures of benefit before we can make bold claims of it being a 'panacea' (even 'close to' one)--and I'm naturally sceptical of such claims.
The problem is that my statements are based on a large amount of supporting evidence, whereas your skepticism seems to be disconnected from the current evidence.You seem to be the one making the dogmatic positive statements here. I am simply expressing scepticism.
Fantastic. Looks like I found the right place.Do I know about this field? Well a few months back the UK Medical Research Council set up an advisory board on research strategy into ME/CFS. They invited three people to guide them on choice of research projects. Those three people were Maureen Hanson, Derya Unutmaz and myself. So at least the MRC seems to think I know a bit about the wider context of this.
In this case I would desperately plead with you to review the evidence I provided in the OP. In addition to what I feel is valuable information in the google doc, the wiki has a specific section on CFS in relation to the microbiome and FMT:
https://old.reddit.com/r/HumanMicrobiome/wiki/intro#wiki_cfs.2Fme.3A
And there are also review articles in the "FMT" section which mention FMT for CFS:
Wide benefit from fecal transplants (2015): http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4284325/
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation: Current Applications, Effectiveness, and Future Perspectives (2016): https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4895930/
There are also other wiki sections that don't directly cover CFS, but do cover the mechanisms by which the gut microbiome impacts the entire body:
https://old.reddit.com/r/HumanMicrobiome/wiki/immunesystem
https://old.reddit.com/r/HumanMicrobiome/wiki/intestinalpermeability
https://old.reddit.com/r/HumanMicrobiome/wiki/intro#wiki_mechanisms.3A
https://old.reddit.com/r/HumanMicrobiome/wiki/systemic
And there is additional info not listed in that wiki, such as:
Mitochondria Play an Unexpected Role in Killing Bacteria. The energy-producing organelles also send out parcels with antimicrobial compounds to help destroy pathogen invaders in macrophages. (2018): https://www.the-scientist.com/the-l...-an-unexpected-role-in-killing-bacteria-65246 - since the mitochondria is the main site of energy production, it's plausible that chronic infection could reduce its energy production since it's spending its resources fighting infections.
If you are going to be advising important research councils, you need to be familiar with all of that. Otherwise you are doing us harm.
Since you don't have a signature or anything in your profile about you, may I ask why they went to you for advice? Are you a researcher, doctor, patient advocate, patient?
I refer to the above information and again state that this claim does not seem based on the current evidence whatsoever.nobody has any very clear theory as to why it should be relevant. The evidence that it is relevant is zero so far.
I'm a little confused why this statement was made considering I provided/referenced a large amount of evidence in the OP.That at least is my understanding from attending conferences and reading the literature. If you want to claim otherwise I am very eager to hear evidence but it has to be something plausible and reliably obtained.
We do have evidence. It's in the wiki and the google doc I provided. Getting a large scale trial to confirm it is again exactly what this thread is about.But maybe we should get back to your main claim - that we need completely healthy donors. Why?That sounds intuitively sensible at first but it cannot be based on any evidence if we have no results from trials to confirm it.
Again I do not see this as accurate or logical. And that last statement seems to be conjured up out of nothing. I have cited evidence to the contrary.Moreover, if you think a bit more it must be very likely that the ideal mix of bacteria for ME, if there is such a thing, is going to occur in rather unusual conditions where for some reason the 'best' bacteria are more prevalent than usual. In fact the logical conclusion would be that the ideal transplant would be an entirely artificial mix made up in the lab based on what had proven to be the best from trials. It is highly implausible that there is such a thing as a 'healthy balanced microbiome'.
These are also highly relevant and help explain why high quality donors are so rare:
https://archive.fo/ukhtQ#selection-803.0-803.1
https://archive.fo/XUhyi
I do not agree this is an accurate summary of the cited super-donor review. What you've described is what the Taymount Clinic is trying to do. And this is something I've heavily criticized as being a sign that they have a poor understanding of the gut microbiome and FMT.They think (although there is little conclusive proof) that a wide variety of species within gut flora is a good thing and pooling stools (an expression that i find quite unsavoury) from a wide variety of donors is the better course of action rather than using carefully isolated super donors. The premise being ...we don’t really know what’s going on so if we throw the kitchen sink at it (I’m terms of lots of species) it should sort itself out better than trying to force a super donor flora onto an indivdual when we know that flora varies a lot between healthy individuals.
There is some preliminary evidence to suggest that among donors who are already effective, combining them gives better results. For example, Mo Farah's (elite long distance runner) plus Messi's poop may be more effective than using either of them alone. But there is not evidence that multiple low quality donors can equate one high quality donor. People who take that stance are showing their own personal ignorance rather than the ignorance of the entire field.
BTW, that review and more have been in the /r/HumanMicrobiome wiki.
Causation has been overwhelmingly proven at this point, in my opinion. I covered this previously in this thread.What the article skims over is the cause or effect argument ....basically it acknowledges that cause is difficult to prove since we don’t know enough but then goes on to say that the plethora of small inconclusive studies that suggest a cause is sufficient. It reads a bit contradictory in places.