| Literature DB >> 24780623 |
Sarah King1, Julie Glanville1, Mary Ellen Sanders2, Anita Fitzgerald1, Danielle Varley1.
Abstract
Recent systematic reviews have reported a positive, although modest, effect of probiotics in terms of preventing common cold symptoms. In this systematic review, the effect of probiotics, specifically Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains, on the duration of acute respiratory infections in otherwise healthy children and adults was evaluated. To identify relevant trials, eight databases, including MEDLINE, Embase, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (CDSR), the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL), the Database of Abstracts of Reviews of Effects (DARE), Health Technology Assessment (HTA), Science Citation Index (SCI) and OAISTER, were searched from inception to 20 July 2012. Details regarding unpublished studies/databases were also obtained from probiotic manufacturers. Study selection, data extraction and quality assessment were carried out by two reviewers. Risk of bias was assessed using criteria adapted from those published by the Centre for Reviews and Dissemination. In this review, twenty randomised controlled trials (RCT) were included, of which twelve were considered to have a low risk of bias. Meta-analysis revealed significantly fewer numbers of days of illness per person (standardised mean difference (SMD) - 0·31 (95% CI - 0·41, - 0·11), I²= 3%), shorter illness episodes by almost a day (weighted mean difference - 0·77 (95% CI - 1·50, - 0·04), I²= 80%) (without an increase in the number of illness episodes), and fewer numbers of days absent from day care/school/work (SMD - 0·17 (95% CI - 0·31, - 0·03), I²= 67%) in participants who received a probiotic intervention than in those who had taken a placebo. Reasons for heterogeneity between the studies were explored in subgroup analysis, but could not be explained, suggesting that the effect sizes found may differ between the population groups. This systematic review provides evidence from a number of good-quality RCT that probiotics reduce the duration of illness in otherwise healthy children and adults.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24780623 PMCID: PMC4054664 DOI: 10.1017/S0007114514000075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Characteristics of the included studies
| Intervention | Comparator | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Country of study | Population group | Condition | Detail(s) | Number randomised (included in the analysis) | Details | Number randomised (included in the analysis) |
| Bentley (2008, unpublished results) | Germany | Adults at an increased risk of infection (at least two episodes in the previous 6 months) | Common cold |
| 155 (146) | Placebo: sachet containing maltodextrin without living cultures | 155 (138) |
| Berggren | Sweden | Healthy adults aged 18–65 years | Common cold |
| 159 (137) | Placebo: sachet containing maltodextrin without living cultures | 159 (135) |
| Cáceres | Chile | Children (aged 1–5 years) attending day-care centres | Acute respiratory tract infections |
| 203 (170) | Placebo: milk product with no probiotic | 195 (179) |
| Cazzola | France | Children (aged 3–7 years) attending school | Common winter diseases (URTI, LRTI and gastrointestinal tract infections) |
| 52 (62) | Placebo: contained only common excipients | 73 (50) |
| de Vrese | Germany | Healthy adults (aged 18–67 years) | Common cold |
| 238 (225) | Placebo: vitamin mineral preparation without probiotic | 241 (229) |
| Guillemard | Germany | Healthy shift workers | CID* | Actimel, | 500 (500) | Placebo: dairy drink without active components | 500 (500) |
| Guillemard | France | Elderly (not living in an institution) | URTI | Actimel, | 537 (535) | Placebo: dairy drink without active components | 535 (535) |
| Hatakka (2007, unpublished results) and Hatakka | Finland | Children (aged 1–6 years) attending day-care centres | Gastrointestinal and respiratory infections |
| Unclear (282) | Placebo: milk without probiotic | Unclear (289) |
| Hojsak | Croatia | Hospitalised children aged 12 months and older | Respiratory symptoms |
| 376 (376) | Placebo: fermented milk product without | 366 (366) |
| Hojsak | Croatia | Children attending day-care centres | Respiratory symptoms |
| 139 (139) | Placebo: fermented milk product without | 142 (142) |
| Kloster | Norway | Children (aged 12–36 months) attending day-care centres | Gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms | Biola with | 117 (97) | Placebo: fermented milk drink without probiotic bacteria | 123 (102) |
| Kumpu | Finland | Children (aged 2–6 years) attending day-care centres | Respiratory symptoms |
| 261 (251) | Placebo: fresh milk without | 262 (250) |
| Leyer | China | Children (aged 3–5 years) | Cold and influenza-like symptoms | Two interventions: | Placebo: sucrose added to 1 % fat milk | 104 (104) | |
|
| 110 (110) | ||||||
|
| 112 (112) | ||||||
| Merenstein | USA | Healthy children (aged 3–6 years) attending day care/school | CID | DanActive, | 314 (250 households) | Placebo: non-fermented acidified dairy drink | 324 (250 households) |
| Niborski (2008, unpublished results) | France | Healthy adults (mostly men) recruited from a fireman training course | CID |
| 118 (118) | Placebo: acidified milk (no bacteria) | 121 (121) |
| Prodeus (2008, unpublished results) | Russia | Children (aged 3–5 years) attending day-care centres | URTI |
| 300 (300) | Placebo: acidified milk (no bacteria) | 299 (299) |
| Smith | USA | Apparently healthy college students | URTI |
| 114 (101) | Placebo: powder without probiotic | 117 (97) |
| Tiollier | France | Male cadets undergoing commando training | Respiratory tract infections |
| 24 (24) | Placebo: non-fermented milk | 23 (23) |
| Tubelius | Sweden | Healthy employees working at TetraPak | Respiratory and/or gastrointestinal tract infections | Probiotic drinking straw with | 132 (94) | Placebo: drinking straw without probiotic | 130 (87) |
| Turchet | Italy | Free-living elderly aged above 60 years | CID |
| 180 (180) | No treatment | 180 (180) |
URTI, upper respiratory tract infections; LRTI, lower respiratory tract infections.
CID included URTI, LRTI and gastrointestinal tract infections.
Quality criteria and study risk of bias assessment
| Reference | Was randomisation carried out appropriately? | Was the concealment of treatment allocation adequate? | Were the care providers, participants and outcome assessors blind to treatment allocation? | Were the groups similar at the onset of the study in terms of prognostic factors, for example, severity of the disease? | Were there any unexpected imbalances in dropouts between the groups? If so, were they explained or adjusted for? | Is there any evidence to suggest that the authors measured more outcomes than they reported? | Did the analysis include an ITT analysis? If so, was this appropriate? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bentley (2008, unpublished results) | L | L | L | L | L? | L | L |
| Berggren | L | L | L | L | L | L | H |
| Cáceres | L | L | L | L | H | Y | H |
| Cazzola | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| de Vrese | L | L | L | L | L | L | H |
| Guillemard | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Guillemard | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Hatakka (2007, unpublished results) and Hatakka | L | L | L? | L? | L | L | H |
| Hojsak | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Hojsak | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Kloster | L | L? | L? | L | L | L | H |
| Kumpu | L | L | L? | L? | ? | L | H |
| Leyer | L | L | L? | L | L | L | L |
| Merenstein | L | L | L | L | L? | L | L |
| Niborski | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Prodeus | L | L | L | L? | L | L | L |
| Smith | L | L | L | L | H | L | H |
| Tiollier | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Tubelius | L | L | L | L | L | L | H |
| Turchet | L | L? | H | L? | H | L | L |
ITT, intention-to-treat; L, low risk; L?, low risk with some areas of uncertainty; H, high risk; ?, unclear risk.
Results of included studies conducted in children (Mean values and standard deviations)
| Study | Condition | Duration of treatment (months) | Treatments | Age (years) | Number randomised (included in the analysis) | Percentage of females | Number (%) of participants with at least one illness episode | Number of illness episodes | Duration of illness episodes (d) | Number of days of illness | Number of days absent | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| ||||||||
| Cáceres | Acute RTI | 3 |
| 3·1 | 1·1 | 203 (170) | 52·7 | NR | 172 | 20·4 | 14·4 | NR | 4·70 | 5·5 | |
| Placebo | 3·2 | 1·0 | 195 (179) | 50·8 | NR | 181 | 19·4 | 14·8 | NR | 4·05 | 5·6 | ||||
| Cazzola | Common winter diseases | 3 |
| 4·1 | 1·0 | 62 (62) | 46·8 | 29 | 64 | NR | NR | 2·11 | 2·1 | ||
| Placebo | 4·2 | 1·1 | 73 (50) | 46·6 | 43 (86 %) | 87 | 2·88 | 2·8 | |||||||
| Hatakka (2007, unpublished results) and Hatakka | GI and RI | 7 |
| 4·6 | 1·5 | Unclear (282) | 46 | 97 (34 %) | NR | NR | NR | 4·9 | NR | ||
| Placebo | 4·4 | 1·5 | Unclear (289) | 52 | 123 (43 %) | 5·8 | NR | ||||||||
| Hojsak | Respiratory symptoms | Median: 5 d |
| 9·9 | 5·1 | 376 (376) | 49·2 | 8 (2 %) | NR | NR r | 8 (2·1 %) | NR | |||
| Placebo | 10·6 | 5·0 | 366 (366) | 44·3 | 20 (6 %) | NR | NR r | 19 (5·2 %) | NR | ||||||
| Hojsak | Respiratory symptoms | 3 |
| 51·9 months (13–86) | 139 (139) | 43·9 | 60 (43 %) | NR | NR | 39 (28·1 %) | 3·1 | 3·6 | |||
| Placebo | 53·6 months (13–83) | 142 (142) | 44·4 | 96 (68 %) | 70 (49·3 %) | 5·1 | 3·6 | ||||||||
| Kloster Smerud | Gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms | 7 | Biola ( | Over both groups: 18 months | 117 (97) | NR | 92 | 492 | 5·39 | 7·89‡ | 5·35 | 3·97‡ | 7·5 | 5·0 | |
| Placebo | Over both groups: 18 months | 123 (102) | NR | 95 (93 %) | 564 | 4·69 | 5·19 | 5·94 | 3·77 | 8·5 | 5·0 | ||||
| Kumpu | Respiratory symptoms | 28 weeks |
| 4·0 | 1·3 | 261 (251) | 47 | 239 (95 %) | NR | Median 8 d (IQR 5–12) | 5·03 | 0·88 | NR | ||
| Placebo | 4·0 | 1·4 | 262 (250) | 47 | 236 (94 %) | NR | Median 8 d (IQR 5–12) | 5·17 | 0·96 | NR | |||||
| Leyer | Cold and influenza-like symptoms | 6 |
| 3·7 | 0·7 | 110 (110) | 57 | NR | NR | NR | 4·5 | 4·7 | 3·6 | 3·7‡ | |
|
| 3·8 | 0·6 | 112 (112) | 52·7 | NR | NR | NR | 3·4 | 3·7 | 3·8 | 3·9 | ||||
| Placebo | 4·1 | 0·54 | 104 (104) | 57·7 | NR | NR | NR | 6·5 | 7·3 | 5·2 | 5·7 | ||||
| Merenstein | CID | 90 d | DanActive ( | 4·86 | 1·12 | 314 (250 households) | 50 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 421·5 d ‡absent (1·69 d/household) | |||
| Placebo | 4·94 | 1·13 | 324 (250 households) | 46·9 | NR | NR | NR | NR | 463·0 d absent (1·85 d/household) | ||||||
| Prodeus | Upper RI | 3 |
| Over both groups: 4 | 300 (300) | Overall 45·7 | 66 (22 %) | 98 | NR | NR | 5·68 | 4·01‡ | |||
| Placebo | Over both groups: 4 | 299 (299) | 73 (24 %) | 93 | NR | NR | 5·64 | 3·67 |
RTI, respiratory tract infections; NR, not reported; FOS, fructo-oligosaccharides; GI, gastrointestinal infections; RI, respiratory infections; IQR, interquartile range; CID, common infectious diseases.
The total number of illness episodes was calculated from the total number of illness episodes per child (included in the analysis).
Although this study used FOS along with probiotic and did not use it in the control, the level of FOS was only 750 mg, which is considered to be below an active dose( , ).
Data obtained from the study authors.
‘Health events’.
The authors stated that the number of days with symptoms was lower in the treatment group, but the difference was not significant.
To calculate mean difference and 95 % CI, standard deviation was calculated from the CI.
Children with a RTI that lasted >3 d.
Standard deviation was calculated from the P value.
Number of days with at least one respiratory symptom per subject per month.
CID included upper RTI, lower RTI and gastrointestinal tract infections.
Number of CID.
Results of included studies conducted in adults (Mean values and standard deviations)
| Study | Condition | Duration of treatment (weeks) | Treatments | Age (years) | Number randomised (included in the analysis) | Percentage of females | Number (%) of participants with at least one illness episode | Number of illness episodes | Duration of illness episodes (d) | Number of days of illness | Number of days absent | |||
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| |||||||
| Bentley (2008, unpublished results) | Common cold | 12 |
| 45·3 | 17·1 | 155 (146) | Overall 66·5 | 72 (49 %) | 87 | 5·6 | 1·3 | NR | NR | |
| Placebo | 46·6 | 17·2 | 155 (138) | 76 (55 %) | 98 | 6·7 | 0·8 | NR | NR | |||||
| Berggren | Common cold | 12 |
| 46·5 | 159 (137) | 65·7 | 76 (55 %) | 121 | 7·0 | NR | 6·2 | 9·27 | NR | |
| Placebo | 43·7 | 159 (135) | 66·7 | 91 (67 %) | 170 | 7·0 | NR | 8·6 | 10·45 | NR | ||||
| de Vrese | Common cold | 3–5·5 months |
| 37 | 12 | 238 (225) | 63·9 | NR | 158 | 7·0 ( | NR | NR | ||
| Placebo | 38 | 14 | 241 (229) | 58·9 | NR | 153 | 8·9 ( | NR | NR | |||||
| Guillemard | CID | 3 months | Actimel ( | 31·8 | 8·9 | 500 (500) | 57 | 213 (43 %) | Unclear | 6·9 | 4·5 | NR | 2·0 | 4·3 |
| Placebo | 32·5 | 8·9 | 500 (500) | 56 | 256 (51 %) | Unclear | 6·5 | 4·5 | NR | 1·6 | 4·0 | |||
| Niborski | CID | 7 |
| Overall median 21 years (range 18–29 years) | 118 (118) | Overall 1·3 | 28 (24 %) | 32 | 3 | 2·04 | 3 | 2·29 | 0·18 | 0·61 |
| Placebo | Overall median 21 years (range 18–29 years) | 121 (121) | Overall 1·3 | 34 (28 %) | 38 | 4 | 2·04 | 4 | 2·29 | 0·24 | 0·61 | |||
| Smith | Upper RTI | 12 s |
| Overall median 19 years (range 18–24 years) | 114 (101) | 80·2 | Not clear | 83 ‘cases’ | NR | 5·58 | 4·41 | 23 d missed work and school (0·27/‘case’) | ||
| Placebo | Overall median 19 years (range 18–24 years) | 117 (97) | 72·2 | Not clear | 84 ‘cases’ | NR | 7·11 | 5·07 | 45 d missed work and school (0·54/‘case’) | |||||
| Tiollier | RTI | 4 |
| 21·3 | (0·2) | 24 (24) | 100 % male | 11 (46 %) | 17 | NR | 5·5 | 1·6 | NR | |
| Placebo | 21·3 | (0·4) | 23 (23) | 13 (57 %) | 30 | NR | 6·1 | 1·7 | NR | |||||
| Tubelius | RTI and GI | 80 d |
| 44 | 132 (94) | 35 % | NR | NR | NR | NR | Median 3 d | |||
| Placebo | 44 | 130 (87) | 29 % | NR | NR | NR | NR | Median 3 d |
NR, not reported; CID, common infectious diseases; RTI, respiratory tract infections; GI, gastrointestinal infections.
To calculate mean difference with 95 % CI, standard deviations were imputed based on the method of de Vrese et al. ( ).
Standard deviations were obtained from the study authors.
No P value reported.
To calculate mean difference with 95 % CI, standard deviations were calculated from the sem.
Data obtained from the study authors.
CID included upper RTI, lower RTI and GI.
Standard deviation was calculated from the P value.
Results of included studies conducted in elderly people (Mean values and standard deviations)
| Study | Condition | Duration of treatment (months) | Treatments | Age (years) | Number randomised (included in the analysis) | Percentage of females | Number (%) of participants with at least one illness episode | Number of illness episodes | Duration of illness episodes (d) | Number of days of illness | Number of days absent | ||
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| Mean |
| ||||||
| Guillemard | Upper RTI | 3 | Actimel ( | Median 76·0 | 537 (535) | 63·1 | 61 (11 %) | 120 | 7·7 | 7·2 | 8·5 | 7·2 | NR |
| Placebo | Median 76·0 | 535 (535) | 62·2 | 66 (12 %) | 135 | 11·0 | 7·7 | 11·6 | 7·9 | NR | |||
| Turchet | CID | 3 | Milk-fermented yogurt culture and | 67·1 | 6·0 | 180 (180) | Overall 67 | 52 (29 %) | NR | 7·0 | 3·2 | NR | NR |
| No treatment | 69·3 | 5·6 | 180 (180) | Overall 67 | 50 (28 %) | NR | 8·7 | 3·7 | NR | NR |
CID, common infectious diseases; RTI, respiratory tract infections; NR, not reported.
CID included upper RTI, lower RTI and gastrointestinal tract infections.
Fig. 1Mean duration of illness episodes (d). The ‘total’ is the overall number of illness episodes experienced by the participants (randomised in a 1:1 ratio) in each treatment group. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).
Fig. 2Mean duration of illness episodes (d) – analysis by risk of bias. (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).
Fig. 3Duration of illness per person. In this meta-analysis, dichotomous and continuous data were pooled. The totals used in this analysis (not shown) were mostly the number of individuals with at least one illness episode (see Table 3). In one study( ), the totals used in the analysis were the numbers of participants included in the study, and in another study( ), the totals used were the numbers of ‘cases’ of illness (in both studies, the number of individuals with illness episodes was not reported). (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).
Fig. 4Days absent from day care/school/work. The ‘total’ is mostly the number of individuals with at least one illness episode. In two studies( , ), the totals used were the number of participants included in the study; in one study( ), the totals were the number of households randomised, and in another study( ), the totals were the number of ‘cases’ of illness (in all these studies, the number of individuals with illness episodes was not reported). (A colour version of this figure can be found online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).