| Literature DB >> 23316359 |
Megan Rossi1, Kerenaftali Klein, David W Johnson, Katrina L Campbell.
Abstract
Objective. This paper assessed the effectiveness of pre-, pro-, and synbiotics on reducing two protein-bound uremic toxins, p-cresyl sulphate (PCS) and indoxyl sulphate (IS). Methods. English language studies reporting serum, urinary, or fecal PCS and/or IS (or their precursors) following pre-, pro-, or synbiotic interventions (>1 day) in human adults were included. Population estimates of differences in the outcomes between the pre- and the postintervention were estimated for subgroups of studies using four meta-analyses. Quality was determined using the GRADE approach. Results. 19 studies met the inclusion criteria, 14 in healthy adults and five in haemodialysis patients. Eight studies investigated prebiotics, six probiotics, one synbiotics, one both pre- and probiotics, and three studies trialled all three interventions. The quality of the studies ranged from moderate to very low. 12 studies were included in the meta-analyses with all four meta-analyses reporting statistically significant reductions in IS and PCS with pre- and probiotic therapy. Conclusion. There is a limited but supportive evidence for the effectiveness of pre- and probiotics on reducing PCS and IS in the chronic kidney disease population. Further studies are needed to provide more definitive findings before routine clinical use can be recommended.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23316359 PMCID: PMC3536316 DOI: 10.1155/2012/673631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nephrol
Figure 1Search methodology for the PCS and IS literature review.
Published studies on the effectiveness of prebiotics on reducing indoxyl sulphate and p-cresyl sulphate.
| Author | Study | Patients | Supplement total dose/day (CFU or g) number of doses/day | Duration | Analysis | Main results (preintervention and postintervention (mean difference (SD))) | Comments | Grade benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cloetens et al., (2010) | Randomised-placebo-controlled crossover trial |
| Prebiotic: AXOS degree of polymerization = 6 | 3 wks in | Heat and acid deproteinisation, | Δ | (i) 4-week washout period between each arm | Moderate |
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| De Preter et al., (2008)[ | Case series |
| S1: lactulose 20 g | 0–4 wks | Heat and acid deproteinisation, GCMS | Δ | (i) Both studies increased in bifidobacterium levels S1: | Low |
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| Ito et al., (1993a) | Case series |
| TD (including GOS) 15 g administered in iced tea | 0–6 days | Heat and acid deproteinisation GC, FID | Δ | (i) Post was measured on the 6th day of ingestion | Low |
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| Ito et al., (1993b) | Case series |
| GOS (Oligomate 50) 2.5 g administrated in apple juice which included | 0–3 wks | Heat and acid deproteinisation | Δ | (i) Post was measured on 6th day of week 3 | Low |
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| Terada et al., (1992) | Case series |
| Lactulose | 0–2 wks | Heat and acid deproteinisation GC, FID | Δ | (i) Increased bifidobacterium levels and lactobacillus | Low |
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| Geboes et al., (2006) | Case series |
| Inulin degree of polymerization = 12, | 0–4 wks | Heat and acid deproteinisation, GCMS | Δ | (i) Low overall recovery of the label | Very low |
| Outcome markers-total PC and stable isotopes [ | Δ | (iii) Usual diet, advised to keep constant macronutrient composition. Diet records kept at intervals throughout the study to allow for qualitative comparison—results not reported | ||||||
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| Alles et al., (1999) | Placebo controlled nonrandomised experimental trial |
| TOS degree of | 0–3 wk standardise run in diet | Freeze-thaw deproteinisation, | Δ | (i) Intervention and placebo increased in bifidobacterium levels. | Low |
| Placebo = 12 | Low dose group = 7.5 g | 3–7 wk intervention | High dose group: −3.0 (−11,6) (ns) | (ii) No run-out period | ||||
| 3 dose/day | Low dose group: −5.0 (−11,6) (ns) | (iii) 90% of food was provided according to a dietitian prescribed standardized low-fibre high-protein diet | IS− | |||||
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| Meijers et al., (2009) | Case series |
| OF-IN (Orafti Synergy1) total 20 g | 0–4 wks | Sodium octanoate, | Δ | (i) Commenced 1/2 dose: 1/day first wk, increase to full by week 2 | Very Low |
| (i) Oligofructose degree of polymerization = 4, 10 g | wk 0–4 | |||||||
| (ii) Raftiline HP degree of polymerization = 12, | PCS 38.5–32.0 (−6.5) (0.01) | (ii) PCS levels remained significantly different 4 weeks post | PC+ | |||||
| 2 dose/day | IS 23.7–22.4 (−1.3) (ns) | (iii) No monitoring of diet | IS– | |||||
Published studies on the effectiveness of probiotics on reducing indoxyl sulphate and p-cresyl sulphate.
| Author | Study | Patients | Supplement total dose/day (CFU or g) number of doses/day | Duration | Analysis method | Main results (preintervention and postintervention (mean difference)) | Comments | Grade benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ling et al., |
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| 0–4 wks | Heat and acid deproteinisation, HPLC, FS | Δ | (i) Subgroup from a larger study | Moderate | |
| Placebo-controlled non-randomised experimental trial |
| (within group, wk 0–4) | (ii) 2 week runout period levels increased towards baseline levels 41.5 mg/24 hr | |||||
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| 1 dose/day | Tx grp: 45.0–35.5 (−9.5) (<0.05) | (iii) Both groups were also given 9 g fibre from aleuronic layer of whole-grain rye daily | PC+ | ||||
| Placebo: 46.5–43.1 (−3.4) (ns) | (iv) 3 day food records were analysed for macro nutrients and fibre questionnaire for total fibre intake. No significant difference between groups was reported | |||||||
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| Tohyama et al., (1981) |
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| 0–3 wk control | Heat and acid deproteinisation, GC, FID | Δ | (i) Urine was analysed at different times of the day between baseline and post | Very Low | |
| Interrupted time series without a parallel control group | (within group, wk 4–9) | (ii) Included rat study which showed significant reductions also | ||||||
| PC − 42.6 (±33.7) (<0.05) | (iii) Strong correlation between fecal tryptophanase activity and urinary IS ( | |||||||
| 1 dose/day | IS − 29.3 (±15.9) (<0.05) | (iv) 2 week run-out period concentrations returned to initial levels post feeding—data not shown | PC+ | |||||
| (v) No dietary restrictions | IS+ | |||||||
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| Fujiwara et al., (2001) | Case series |
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| 0-1 wk | Deprotinisation method was not disclosed, HPLC, UV-VIS | Δ | (i) Subgroup of another study | Low |
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| Takayama et al., (2003) | Nonrandomised-placebo controlled experimental trial |
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| 0–5 wks | Deproteinization (not disclosed) | Δ | (i) Placebo has different dose and strain | Low |
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| Tx group: 49.0–35.0 (−14.0) (<0.005) | (ii) 2 week runout period levels increased towards baseline levels 44 mg/L | IS+ | ||||
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| Dose/day not disclosed | Placebo: 48.0–52.0 (+4.0) (ns) | (iii) No monitoring of diet | |||||
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| Taki et al., (2005) |
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| 0–12 wks | Not disclosed | Δ | (i) Strain not disclosed | Very low | |
| 0–4 wks: 3 × 109 | (wk 0–4) | (ii) Analysis methods not described | ||||||
| Case series | 4–8 wks: 6 × 109 | (wk 0–8) | (iii) No dose response effect | |||||
| Administered in gastroresistant capsule | (wk 0–12) | (iv) No runout period | ||||||
| Dose/day not disclosed | (v) Monitoring of diet (not disclosed) | IS+ | ||||||
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| Hida et al., (1996) [ |
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| 0–4 wks | Plasma: reverse-Phase HPLC, UV detection | Δ | (i) Strain not disclosed | Very low | |
| Case series | Fecal: steam distilled, GC, FID | IS 45.2–31.1 (−14.1) (<0.01) | (ii) Fecal analysis included 10 patients only from 0–2 week | IS+ | ||||
| PC 17.8–18.3*(+0.5) (ns) | (iii) Decreased enterobacteria | PC+ (fecal) | ||||||
| 2 dose/day | Δ | (iv) No runout period | PC− (serum) | |||||
| Indole 45.0–32.0* (−13.0) (<0.05) | (v) No monitoring of diet | |||||||
Published studies with more than one intervention (Pre-, Pro- and/or Synbiotics) on reducing indoxyl sulphate and p-cresyl sulphate.
| Author (year) | Intervention | Study design | Patients | Supplement total dose/day (CFU or g) number of doses/day | Duration | Analysis | Main results (preintervention and post intervention (mean difference)) | Comments | Grade benefit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| De Preter et al., (2006) | Prebiotic | Randomised placebo controlled cross over trial |
| Probiotic: lyophilized | 4 wk in | Heat and acid |
| (i) Variability of probiotic dose per capsule (1–2.5 × 109) | Moderate |
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| De Preter et al., (2004) | Probiotic | Randomised placebo |
| Probiotic: | 2 wks in | Heat and acid | Δ | (i) Theory-based explanation of different phases of total urinary PC, that is, 0–24 hr and 24–48 hr; no other paper measures PC in this way | Moderate |
| Percentage of isotope: −0.87, 0.05 (−0.92) (0.005) | components containing high quantities of fermentable carbohydrates | ||||||||
| 2 dose/day | Δ | ||||||||
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| De Preter et al., (2007) | Prebiotic | Randomized |
| Probiotic: | Each Group 4 weeks in each arm | Heat and acid deproteinisation, GC, MS | Δ | (i) Analysis at week 4 was taken the day after prebiotic was ceased | Low |
| Placebo | (v) Usual diet, advised to keep stable. Avoid intake of fermented milk products and food | ||||||||
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| Swanson et al., (2002) | Randomised placebo controlled trial |
| Probiotic: free-dried | 0–4 wks | Freeze thaw deproteinisation, GC, FID | Δ | (i) Concentration of all fecal parameters increased from week 2–4 even in the control group | Very low | |
| Probiotic | Placebo, | Prebiotic: fructose oligosaccharide, (Nutraflora) 6 g administered in non carbonated beverage | Probiotic | (ii) Conclusions were made base on nonstatistically significant data | |||||
| Synbiotic, | 2 dose/day | PC 0.26–0.30 (+0.04) (ns) | (iii) No runout period | PC– | |||||
| PC 0.21–0.26 (+0.05) (ns) | (v) Substantial difference in total fibre intakes, that is, probiotic group had 10 g more than prebiotic group at week 6 | ||||||||
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| Nakabayashi et al., | Synbiotic | Interrupted time series without a parallel control group | | Probiotic | 0–2 wk runin | Heat acid deproteinization, HPLC, FS | Δ | (i) 1 participant used medications that contained live lactic acid bacteria | Very Low |
| (ii) | 3–5 wk intervention | PC 17.1–14.2 (−2.9) (0.031) | (ii) No runout period | PC+ | |||||
| Prebiotic: | IS 32.2–30.1 (−1.8) (ns) | (iii) No monitoring of diet | IS– | ||||||
Key:
median difference.
*estimated value from graph, exact value not reported.
#paper stated no change, exact figures not reported.
@no trend was evident among three groups.
AXOS: arabinoxylan-oligosaccharide; FID: flame ionisation detection; FS: fluorescence spectroscopy; GC: gas chromatography; GOS: galactooligosaccharide; HPLC: high performance liquid chromatography; IS: indoxyl sulphate; MS, mass spectrometry; OF-IN, oligofructose-enriched inulin; PC/S: p-cresyl/sulphate; SD: standard deviation; TD: transgalactosylated disaccharide; TOS: trans-galaco oligosaccharide; Tx Grp, treatment group; UV: ultra violet; VIS: visible; wk: week.
Figure 2Meta-analysis for pre-, pro-, and synbiotic therapy on serum IS in the HD population.
Figure 3Meta-analysis for pre-, pro-, and synbiotic therapy on urinary PCS in the healthy population.