One dog’s waste is another dog’s wealth : a pilot study of fecal microbiota transplantation in dogs with acute hemorrhagic diarrhea syndrome
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Date
Authors
Gal, Arnon
Barko, Patrick C.
Biggs, Patrick J.
Gedye, Kristene R.
Midwinter, Anne C.
Williams, David A.
Burchell, Richard K.
Pazzi, Paolo
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Abstract
Canine acute hemorrhagic diarrhea syndrome (AHDS) has been associated in some studies
with Clostridioides perfringens overgrowth and toxin-mediated necrosis of the intestinal
mucosa. We aimed to determine the effect of a single fecal microbiota transplantation
(FMT) on clinical scores and fecal microbiomes of 1 and 7 dogs with AHDS from New Zealand and South Africa. We hypothesized that FMT would improve AHDS clinical scores and
increase microbiota alpha-diversity and short-chain fatty acid (SCFA)-producing microbial
communities’ abundances in dogs with AHDS after FMT. We sequenced the V3-V4 region
of the 16S-rRNA gene in the feces of AHDS FMT-recipients and sham-treated control dogs,
and their healthy donors at admission, discharge, and 30 days post-discharge. There were
no significant differences in median AHDS clinical scores between FMT-recipients and
sham-treated controls at admission or discharge (P = 0.22, P = 0.41). At admission, the
Shannon diversity index (SDI) was lower in AHDS dogs than healthy donors (P = 0.002).
The SDI did not change from admission to 30 days in sham-treated dogs yet increased in
FMT-recipients from admission to discharge (P = 0.04) to levels not different than donors (P
= 0.33) but significantly higher than sham-treated controls (P = 0.002). At 30 days, the SDI
did not differ between FMT recipients, sham-treated controls, and donors (P = 0.88). Principal coordinate analysis of the Bray-Curtis index separated post-FMT and donor dogs from
pre-FMT and sham-treated dogs (P = 0.009) because of increased SCFA-producing genera’s abundances after FMT. A single co-abundance subnetwork contained many of the
same OTUs found to be differentially abundant in FMT-recipients, and the abundance of
this module was increased in FMT-recipients at discharge and 30 days, compared to shamtreated controls. We conclude in this small pilot study FMT did not have any clinical benefit.
Description
Keywords
Acute hemorrhagic, Diarrhea syndrome, Pilot study, Dogs (Canis familiaris), Acute hemorrhagic diarrhea syndrome (AHDS), Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Gal, A., Barko, P.C., Biggs, P.J., Gedye, K.R., Midwinter, A.C., Williams, D.A., et al. (2021) One dog’s
waste is another dog’s wealth: A pilot study of fecal
microbiota transplantation in dogs with acute
hemorrhagic diarrhea syndrome. PLoS One 16(4):
e0250344. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250344.
