| Literature DB >> 23401695 |
Vrinda Nair1, Amuchou S Soraisham.
Abstract
Nosocomial sepsis is associated with increased mortality and morbidity including neurodevelopmental impairment and prolonged hospital stay. Prevention of sepsis especially in the preterm infants in the neonatal intensive care unit remains a major challenge. The gastrointestinal tract is an important source of potential pathogens causing nosocomial sepsis as the immature intestinal epithelium can permit translocation of bacteria and yeast. The intestinal tract and its microflora play an important role in the immunity. Altering the gut microflora has been extensively studied for immunomodulation in preterm infants. Probiotics are live microorganisms which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the host. Probiotics have been used for prevention and treatment of various medical conditions in children and adults. Studies on probiotics in premature infants have focused on normalizing intestinal flora, improvement in feeding intolerance, prevention of necrotizing enterocolitis and sepsis. In this paper, we discuss the intestinal bacterial colonization pattern; the rational for probiotics and prebiotic therapy with special focus on the prevention of nosocomial sepsis in preterm infants.Entities:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23401695 PMCID: PMC3557621 DOI: 10.1155/2013/874726
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Pediatr ISSN: 1687-9740
Clinical trials of probiotics for prevention of NEC and sepsis in neonates.
| Study | GA (wk) | Probiotic used | Dose and duration | Primary outcome | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Kitajima et al. 1997, Japan [ | <1500 |
| 0.5 × 109 once daily from first feed for 28 days | Gut colonization by BB | No difference in sepsis |
|
Dani et al. 2002, Italy [ | <33 |
| 6 × 109 CFU once daily from first feeds till discharge | Urinary tract infection, bacterial sepsis, NEC | No difference in all three outcomes |
|
Costalos et al. 2003, Greece [ | 28–32 |
| 109/kg twice daily from first feed for 30 days | Gut function and stool colonization | No difference in sepsis |
|
Lin et al. 2005, Taiwan [ | <1500 |
| LA: 1004356 BI: 1015697 twice daily from day 7 until discharge | NEC | ↓ NEC and sepsis rate in probiotic group (12.2% versus 19.3%) |
|
Bin-Nun et al. 2005 Israel [ | ≤1500 |
| BI: 0.35 × 109 CFU | NEC | ↓ NEC in probiotic group. |
|
Manzoni et al. 2006, Italy [ | <1500 |
| 6 × 109 CFU once daily from third day of life to 6 wks or discharge from NICU | Gut colonization by Candida | No difference in sepsis |
|
Stratiki et al. 2007, Greece [ | 27–37 |
| Preterm formula 2 × 107 CFU/g started within 48 h. | Intestinal permeability | No difference in sepsis |
|
Lin et al. 2008, Taiwan [ | <34 |
| 2 × 109 CFU/day for 6 weeks | NEC or death | ↓ NEC and mortality. |
|
Samanta et al. 2009, India [ | <32 |
| 2.5 × 109 CFU/day till discharge | NEC, feed tolerance | ↓ Sepsis in probiotic group (14.3% versus 29.5%) |
|
Rougé et al. 2009 France [ | <32 |
| 1 × 108 CFU per day until discharge | Enteral feed intake at day 14 | No difference in sepsis (33.3% versus 26.5%) |
|
Awad et al. 2010, Egypt [ | All neonate |
| 6 × 109 CFU twice daily from day 1 till discharged | Sepsis and NEC | ↓ sepsis rate in probiotic groups |
|
Mihatsch et al. 2010, Germany [ | <30 and |
| 12 × 109 CFU/Kg/day for 6 weeks | Incidence density of nosocomial infection | No difference in sepsis |
| Romeo et al. 2011, Italy [ | <37 |
| LR: 1 × 108 CFU daily | Gut fungal colonization and late onset sepsis | Probiotics effective in prevention of gut colonization by Candida. |
|
Braga et al. 2011, Brazil [ | <1500 |
| 3.5 × 107–3.5 × 109 CFU | NEC | No difference in sepsis (33.6% versus 37.5%) |
| Sari et al. 2011, Turkey [ | <33 |
| 3.5 × 109 till discharged | NEC, and mortality | No difference in sepsis (26.4% versus 23.4%) |
|
Fernández-Carrocera et al. 2013, Mexico [ | <1500 |
| Multispecies probiotics 1 g/day | NEC | No difference in NEC and sepsis rate (56% versus 58.7%) |
BB: Bifidobacterium bifidus; BL: Bifidobacteruim lactis; LB: Bifidobacterium breve; LGG: Lactobacillus rhamnosus GG; LS: Lactobacillus sporogenes; SB: Saccharomyces boulardii; BBr: Bifidobacteria breve; BLo: Bifidobacterium longum; LC: Lactobacillus casei; NEC: necrotizing enterocolitis; ST: Streptococcus thermophillus; BI: Bifidobacterium infantis; CFU: colony forming units; LP: Lactobacillus plantarum; LR: Lactobacillus reuteri.
Meta-analyses of probiotics in neonates.
| Number of trials | Inclusion criteria | Number of infants | Sepsis (RR; 95% CI) | NEC (RR; 95% CI) |
Mortality (RR; 95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deshpande et al., 2007 [ | 7 | <33 wks | 1393 | 0.94; 0.74–1.20 | 0.36; 0.20–0.65 | 0.47; 0.30–0.73 |
| Deshpande et al., 2010 [ | 11 | <34 wks | 2176 | 0.98; 0.81–1.18 | 0.35; 0.23–0.55 | 0.42; 0.29–0.62 |
| Alfaleh et al., 2011 [ | 16 | <37 wks | 2842 | 0.90, 0.76–1.07 | 0.35, 0.24–0.52 | 0.40, 0.27–0.60 |
| Wang et al., 2012 [ | 20 | <34 wks | 3816 | 0.90; 0.71–1.15 | 0.33; 0.24–0.46 | 0.56; 0.43–0.73 |