Can a Stool Transplant Treat Parkinson's? The First Meta-Analysis — The Gut Check
The Gut Check · Episode 9
Can a Stool Transplant Treat Parkinson's? The First Meta-Analysis
Fecal transplants are a gut-brain frontier for Parkinson's. A 2026 meta-analysis of the randomized trials found no significant benefit yet — a lesson in honest science.
Hosted by Robin Vale · with Craig Rouskey, MSc · ~5 min
See what your gut is telling your brain.
Flore Neurobiome analysis — 15% off →The paper (every claim, linked)
- Liang et al. (2026). Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of the Efficacy of Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Parkinson's Disease. Revista de Neurología. PMID 42411731
- Cryan JF, O'Riordan KJ, Cowan CSM, et al. (2019). The Microbiota-Gut-Brain Axis. Physiological Reviews. PMID 31460832
Full transcript
Robin Vale: Fecal transplants for Parkinson's — one of the boldest gut-brain ideas out there. A 2026 meta-analysis just weighed the evidence. Craig, what did it find?
Craig Rouskey, MSc: Liang and colleagues, in Revista de Neurología, did a PRISMA-compliant systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized trials of fecal microbiota transplantation in Parkinson's — pooling five RCTs, 226 patients in total.
Robin Vale: And the result?
Craig Rouskey, MSc: Honestly? No statistically significant benefit. Across the motor scores, the daily-living scores, and two separate cognitive measures, FMT did not beat control at the follow-up points they examined.
Robin Vale: That's a letdown, given the excitement.
Craig Rouskey, MSc: It is, and it's important to say plainly. The theory is genuinely strong — Parkinson's is deeply tied to the gut, and gut symptoms often precede the movement symptoms by years. But theory isn't proof. Five small, short trials with different protocols simply can't establish a treatment.
Robin Vale: So is the gut-Parkinson's link dead?
Craig Rouskey, MSc: Not at all — the link is real; the treatment just isn't ready. The authors call for larger, standardized, longer trials, and they're right. This is what honest science looks like: a promising idea that hasn't earned the claim yet.
Robin Vale: Craig, thank you. The meta-analysis is linked below. This has been The Gut Check.
The Gut Check is produced with AI-assisted voices — the host is a presenter voice and Craig Rouskey, MSc is a real microbiome scientist whose interpretation this is. Every study cited is real and linked to PubMed. Educational only — not medical advice.