The goal of this pilot experimental medicine interventional study is to explore the degree of transferability of the gut microbiome and associated metabolomic changes in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and fibrosis who receive faecal microbiota transplant (FMT). The main questions is aims to answer is: * To what extent is the gut microbiome transferable from donor to recipient in patients with NAFLD with fibrosis who receive FMT? * What are the dynamics of how the gut microbiome changes over time in these patients? * To what degree does the recipient metabolome change in association with this? Participants will receive up to three capsulised FMT preparations prepared from a donor selected rationally based upon their metabolomic characteristics. They will be asked to attend for serial clinical assessments (including FibroScan and MRE/ MRI-PDFF), and will also be asked to provide serial blood, urine and stool samples for assessment of microbiome and metabolome profiling.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
16
Capsulised faecal microbiota transplant prepared from rationally selected donor, based upon donor metabolomic charateristics
Division of Digestive Diseases/ Liver Unit, St Mary's Hospital Campus, Imperial College London
London, United Kingdom
Change in faecal microbiome composition
Using 16S rRNA gene sequencing and shotgun metagenomic sequencing
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
Change in gut microbial metabolite composition
Using 1H-NMR and mass spectrometry
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in liver fat on MRI
Using MRI-PDFF
Time frame: 16 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in liver fat on FibroScan
Using CAP
Time frame: 16 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in liver stiffness on MRI
Using MRE
Time frame: 16 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in liver stiffness on FibroScan
Using transient elastography
Time frame: 16 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in HbA1c
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in insulin resistance
Combining fasting glucose and insulin levels to generate HOMA-IR
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in BMI
Through combination of measurement of weight in kilogram and height in metres, reporting BMI in kg/m\^2
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
Changes in lipid metabolism
Serum lipid profile
Time frame: 24 weeks after initial FMT
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