Imagine carrying bacteria in your gut that most antibiotics can't touch. These 'superbugs' — CRE and VRE — can cause devastating infections and spread to others. For people who carry them without symptoms, clearing them from the gut is a major challenge. A new analysis looked at whether two approaches could help: transplanting healthy donor stool (FMT) or using a targeted antibiotic rinse (SDD).
The review pooled data from 872 people across 16 studies. It found that stool transplants significantly improved the clearance of both CRE and VRE. The targeted antibiotic rinse also helped clear CRE, but its effect on VRE wasn't clear. This means there are tools that can shift the gut's bacterial community away from these dangerous residents.
However, the story isn't simple. The antibiotic rinse approach was linked to increased antibiotic resistance in several of the studies, which is a serious concern. The effects also appear to be temporary. We don't have clear data on serious side effects or how long the benefits last. The evidence comes from combining many smaller studies, which adds some uncertainty.
This analysis shows that manipulating the gut microbiome is a real pathway for tackling these superbugs. But it's early. The trade-offs, especially with antibiotics, and the durability of the effect are key questions that need answering before this becomes routine care.