Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss: a proof of concept case study

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss : a proof of concept case study. / Wrønding, Tine; Vomstein, Kilian; Bosma, Elleke F; Mortensen, Brynjulf; Westh, Henrik; Heintz, Julie Elm; Mollerup, Sarah; Petersen, Andreas Munk; Ensign, Laura M; DeLong, Kevin; van Hylckama Vlieg, Johan E T; Thomsen, Anne Bloch; Nielsen, Henriette Svarre.

In: EClinicalMedicine, Vol. 61, 102070, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Wrønding, T, Vomstein, K, Bosma, EF, Mortensen, B, Westh, H, Heintz, JE, Mollerup, S, Petersen, AM, Ensign, LM, DeLong, K, van Hylckama Vlieg, JET, Thomsen, AB & Nielsen, HS 2023, 'Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss: a proof of concept case study', EClinicalMedicine, vol. 61, 102070. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070

APA

Wrønding, T., Vomstein, K., Bosma, E. F., Mortensen, B., Westh, H., Heintz, J. E., Mollerup, S., Petersen, A. M., Ensign, L. M., DeLong, K., van Hylckama Vlieg, J. E. T., Thomsen, A. B., & Nielsen, H. S. (2023). Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss: a proof of concept case study. EClinicalMedicine, 61, [102070]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070

Vancouver

Wrønding T, Vomstein K, Bosma EF, Mortensen B, Westh H, Heintz JE et al. Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss: a proof of concept case study. EClinicalMedicine. 2023;61. 102070. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070

Author

Wrønding, Tine ; Vomstein, Kilian ; Bosma, Elleke F ; Mortensen, Brynjulf ; Westh, Henrik ; Heintz, Julie Elm ; Mollerup, Sarah ; Petersen, Andreas Munk ; Ensign, Laura M ; DeLong, Kevin ; van Hylckama Vlieg, Johan E T ; Thomsen, Anne Bloch ; Nielsen, Henriette Svarre. / Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss : a proof of concept case study. In: EClinicalMedicine. 2023 ; Vol. 61.

Bibtex

@article{9af3e24c7a484070b4837564fa17e77b,
title = "Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss: a proof of concept case study",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Vaginal dysbiosis covers imbalances in the vaginal microbiota, defined by altered composition of bacteria, viruses, and fungi and is associated with euploid pregnancy losses, premature birth, infertility, or bacterial vaginosis. A large proportion of women who have vaginal dysbiosis do not experience any symptoms. Antibiotics are the traditional treatment, recently combined with local probiotics in some cases. Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation (VMT) with eubiotic vaginal bacterial microbiota after antibiotic eradication of pathogens has successfully been performed in a case study with five patients, but no VMT has been performed without the use of antibiotics.METHODS: This is a proof of concept case study. The patient was found to have vaginal dysbiosis at the RPL clinic at Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark on the 23rd of June 2021. She was offered and accepted to receive experimental treatment in the form of a VMT as a compassionate use case. VMT is the transfer of cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) from a healthy donor with a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome to a recipient with a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome. CVS is a mixture of e.g., mucus, bacteria, metabolites present in the vaginal canal. Potential donors were thoroughly screened for the absence of STIs, and the most suitable donor sample for the specific patient in this study was determined via an in vitro microbiome competition assay. FINDINGS: A 30-year-old patient with one livebirth and a complicated pregnancy history of two stillbirths and 1 s trimester pregnancy loss in gestational weeks 27 (2019), 17 (2020) and 23 (2020) respectively with complaints of vaginal irritation and discharge that had aggravated in all her pregnancies. Her vaginal microbiome composition showed a 90% dominance of Gardnerella spp. After one VMT there was a complete shift in microbiome composition to 81.2% L. crispatus and 9% L. jensenii with a concurrent resolvement of vaginal symptoms. Single nucleotide polymorphism-analysis confirmed her microbiome to be of donor origin and it remain stable now 1.5 years after the VMT. Five months after the VMT she became pregnant and has successfully delivered a healthy baby at term. INTERPRETATION: Here we report a successful VMT with confirmed donor strain engraftment followed by a successful pregnancy and delivery after a series of late pregnancy losses/stillbirths. Findings suggest that VMT is a potential treatment for severe vaginal dysbiosis. Further, larger studies are required.FUNDING: The study was partially funded (i.e., analysis costs) by Freya Biosciences Aps, Fruebjergvej, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.",
author = "Tine Wr{\o}nding and Kilian Vomstein and Bosma, {Elleke F} and Brynjulf Mortensen and Henrik Westh and Heintz, {Julie Elm} and Sarah Mollerup and Petersen, {Andreas Munk} and Ensign, {Laura M} and Kevin DeLong and {van Hylckama Vlieg}, {Johan E T} and Thomsen, {Anne Bloch} and Nielsen, {Henriette Svarre}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s).",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070",
language = "English",
volume = "61",
journal = "EClinicalMedicine",
issn = "2589-5370",
publisher = "The Lancet Publishing Group",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Antibiotic-free vaginal microbiota transplant with donor engraftment, dysbiosis resolution and live birth after recurrent pregnancy loss

T2 - a proof of concept case study

AU - Wrønding, Tine

AU - Vomstein, Kilian

AU - Bosma, Elleke F

AU - Mortensen, Brynjulf

AU - Westh, Henrik

AU - Heintz, Julie Elm

AU - Mollerup, Sarah

AU - Petersen, Andreas Munk

AU - Ensign, Laura M

AU - DeLong, Kevin

AU - van Hylckama Vlieg, Johan E T

AU - Thomsen, Anne Bloch

AU - Nielsen, Henriette Svarre

N1 - © 2023 The Author(s).

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - BACKGROUND: Vaginal dysbiosis covers imbalances in the vaginal microbiota, defined by altered composition of bacteria, viruses, and fungi and is associated with euploid pregnancy losses, premature birth, infertility, or bacterial vaginosis. A large proportion of women who have vaginal dysbiosis do not experience any symptoms. Antibiotics are the traditional treatment, recently combined with local probiotics in some cases. Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation (VMT) with eubiotic vaginal bacterial microbiota after antibiotic eradication of pathogens has successfully been performed in a case study with five patients, but no VMT has been performed without the use of antibiotics.METHODS: This is a proof of concept case study. The patient was found to have vaginal dysbiosis at the RPL clinic at Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark on the 23rd of June 2021. She was offered and accepted to receive experimental treatment in the form of a VMT as a compassionate use case. VMT is the transfer of cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) from a healthy donor with a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome to a recipient with a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome. CVS is a mixture of e.g., mucus, bacteria, metabolites present in the vaginal canal. Potential donors were thoroughly screened for the absence of STIs, and the most suitable donor sample for the specific patient in this study was determined via an in vitro microbiome competition assay. FINDINGS: A 30-year-old patient with one livebirth and a complicated pregnancy history of two stillbirths and 1 s trimester pregnancy loss in gestational weeks 27 (2019), 17 (2020) and 23 (2020) respectively with complaints of vaginal irritation and discharge that had aggravated in all her pregnancies. Her vaginal microbiome composition showed a 90% dominance of Gardnerella spp. After one VMT there was a complete shift in microbiome composition to 81.2% L. crispatus and 9% L. jensenii with a concurrent resolvement of vaginal symptoms. Single nucleotide polymorphism-analysis confirmed her microbiome to be of donor origin and it remain stable now 1.5 years after the VMT. Five months after the VMT she became pregnant and has successfully delivered a healthy baby at term. INTERPRETATION: Here we report a successful VMT with confirmed donor strain engraftment followed by a successful pregnancy and delivery after a series of late pregnancy losses/stillbirths. Findings suggest that VMT is a potential treatment for severe vaginal dysbiosis. Further, larger studies are required.FUNDING: The study was partially funded (i.e., analysis costs) by Freya Biosciences Aps, Fruebjergvej, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.

AB - BACKGROUND: Vaginal dysbiosis covers imbalances in the vaginal microbiota, defined by altered composition of bacteria, viruses, and fungi and is associated with euploid pregnancy losses, premature birth, infertility, or bacterial vaginosis. A large proportion of women who have vaginal dysbiosis do not experience any symptoms. Antibiotics are the traditional treatment, recently combined with local probiotics in some cases. Vaginal Microbiota Transplantation (VMT) with eubiotic vaginal bacterial microbiota after antibiotic eradication of pathogens has successfully been performed in a case study with five patients, but no VMT has been performed without the use of antibiotics.METHODS: This is a proof of concept case study. The patient was found to have vaginal dysbiosis at the RPL clinic at Copenhagen University Hospital Hvidovre, Denmark on the 23rd of June 2021. She was offered and accepted to receive experimental treatment in the form of a VMT as a compassionate use case. VMT is the transfer of cervicovaginal secretions (CVS) from a healthy donor with a Lactobacillus-dominant vaginal microbiome to a recipient with a dysbiotic vaginal microbiome. CVS is a mixture of e.g., mucus, bacteria, metabolites present in the vaginal canal. Potential donors were thoroughly screened for the absence of STIs, and the most suitable donor sample for the specific patient in this study was determined via an in vitro microbiome competition assay. FINDINGS: A 30-year-old patient with one livebirth and a complicated pregnancy history of two stillbirths and 1 s trimester pregnancy loss in gestational weeks 27 (2019), 17 (2020) and 23 (2020) respectively with complaints of vaginal irritation and discharge that had aggravated in all her pregnancies. Her vaginal microbiome composition showed a 90% dominance of Gardnerella spp. After one VMT there was a complete shift in microbiome composition to 81.2% L. crispatus and 9% L. jensenii with a concurrent resolvement of vaginal symptoms. Single nucleotide polymorphism-analysis confirmed her microbiome to be of donor origin and it remain stable now 1.5 years after the VMT. Five months after the VMT she became pregnant and has successfully delivered a healthy baby at term. INTERPRETATION: Here we report a successful VMT with confirmed donor strain engraftment followed by a successful pregnancy and delivery after a series of late pregnancy losses/stillbirths. Findings suggest that VMT is a potential treatment for severe vaginal dysbiosis. Further, larger studies are required.FUNDING: The study was partially funded (i.e., analysis costs) by Freya Biosciences Aps, Fruebjergvej, 2100 Copenhagen, Denmark.

U2 - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070

DO - 10.1016/j.eclinm.2023.102070

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37528843

VL - 61

JO - EClinicalMedicine

JF - EClinicalMedicine

SN - 2589-5370

M1 - 102070

ER -

ID: 361545264