Vaginal Microbiome Transplant Proves Effective Against Bacterial Vaginosis

Thursday, Oct 17 2019

A new treatment developed by Hadassah Medical Organization and Weizmann Institute of Science researchers, involving a vaginal microbiome transplant from a healthy donor to another women, has been found effective against a common bacterial condition called bacterial vaginosis (BV).

The approach promises to help millions of women by preventing complications during pregnancy, reducing the risk of sexually transmitted infections, and decreasing the need for antibiotics, which often prove to be only a temporary solution.

Co-author of the study Dr. Ahinoam Lev-Sagie, a specialist in vulva and vaginal disorders at Hadassah, explains that during her many years treating patients for BV, a high percentage would come back within the year suffering from the same ailment. “I could not cure them with antibiotics,” she said. 

The researchers tested the potential treatment with five women, ages 27 to 47, who were diagnosed with BV and taking antibiotics prior to the study. They were tested for infection at several intervals up to 21 months following treatment. For four of the women, the transplant was associated with full long-term remission. Although remission in three of the patients necessitated a second transplant (including a donor change in one patient) in order to elicit a long-standing clinical response, in two cases, a single dose induced a long-lasting and complete remission. 

Read more in Medical Daily, The Jerusalem Post. and Nature Medicine.

Learn more about the Hadassah Medical Organization.

Related Stories

alt_text

Tuesday, Jan 12 2021

Hadassah Speedily Vaccinates Its Staff Against COVID-19

As of January 11, out of the 6,500 individuals who work at the Hadassah Medical Organization, 4,800 had received their first dose of the Pfizer vaccine, and 1,000 had received the second dose.

READ MORE ›
alt_text

Tuesday, Jan 5 2021

Mary, From Bethlehem, Experiences Personal Christmas Miracle at Hadassah

Christmas Eve is always a special time for Mary A, an 86-year-old resident of Bethlehem.

READ MORE ›
alt_text

Tuesday, Dec 29 2020

Nurses Inject Hope at Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem

The sun has just come up. It is 6 am and 18 pairs of eyes are staring at two Hadassah Hospital Ein Kerem nurses. One nurse is seated and the other is standing over her, a needle in hand.

READ MORE ›
alt_text

Monday, Dec 21 2020

What Are Organoids? Welcome to a Revolution in Basic Medical Science

Classically, researchers in basic medical science have had two tools: in vitro cultures and animal models. The challenges posed by their limitations are many.

READ MORE ›

Donation Questions

donorservices@hadassah.org

(800) 928-0685

Membership Questions

membership@hadassah.org

(800) 664-5646

Israel Travel

israeltravel@hadassah.org

(800) 237-1517

Contact Us

40 Wall Street

New York, NY 10005

More ›

Show More