Hi constant readers: I am traveling again, and while I’m in a far time zone, news has broken that you might be interested in. So while I don’t have a full understanding myself yet of what’s going on, I’m going to throw up what I’ve got, because I know how many people are interested in this.
Briefly: The US Food and Drug Administration has decided to bring the semi-outlawed — but very safe and very effective — procedure called “fecal transplant” under its auspices, ruling that to perform it, physicians must have applied for an “investigational new drug application,” or IND. This requires a lot of advance paperwork, 30 days of consideration, and does not return not a guaranteed yes. For the transplants, which have been performed informally but carefully by a growing number of physicians as a treatment (and often cure) for devastating C. difficile infection, it may improve safety, but it can’t help but impose obstacles and delay. (My past posts on fecal transplants here and here.)
The decision is confirmed in this letter from the FDA to the American Gastroenterological Association, which also explains the background in this post.
Physician Mike Edmond, of Controversies in Hospital Infection, posts his reaction here. Excerpt:
Researcher Jonathan Eisen counters (and also curates a bunch of links):
And just in my tweetstream overnight, there was this discussion:
The major digestive-disease societies and the American Society for Microbiology both began their annual meetings yesterday. Can’t imagine this won’t be a hot topic of conversation at both.
Update: From Dr. Judy Stone (who appears in the Storify above) an impassioned explanation of why this FDA decision will be bad for patients.

