| Literature DB >> 31263542 |
Viktoriya Nikolova1, Syed Yawar Zaidi2, Allan H Young3, Anthony J Cleare3, James M Stone4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recently the gut microbiota has attracted significant interest in psychiatric research due to the observed bidirectional gut-brain communication. A growing body of evidence from preclinical work has suggested that probiotics may be effective in reducing stress and anxiety and alleviating low mood. It is unclear to what extent these effects are seen in clinical populations. We aimed to identify all published evidence on the efficacy of probiotics as treatment for depression in clinically depressed populations.Entities:
Keywords: depression; probiotics; randomized controlled trial; systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 31263542 PMCID: PMC6595633 DOI: 10.1177/2045125319859963
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Psychopharmacol ISSN: 2045-1253
Figure 1.PRISMA flow chart presenting a breakdown of the search process.
Summary of key characteristics of the included randomized clinical trials (RCTs) (arranged by year of publication).
| First author (year) | Sample | Sample size | Intervention type | Intervention length | Probiotic strains (CFU)/g and dose | Control arm(s) | Outcome measure |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akkasheh (2016)[ | MDD patients | 40 | Add-on | 8 weeks | placebo | BDI | |
| Romijn (2017)[ | Self-referrals with at least moderate depression score; | 79 | Mono-therapy | 8 weeks | placebo | MADRS | |
| Kazemi (2019)[ | MDD patients | 110 | Add-on | 8 weeks | placebo | BDI |
BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CFU, colony-forming unit; MADRS, Montgomery-Asberg Depression Scale.
Methodological quality and risk of bias in the included trials.
| Criterion | Akkasheh et al.[ | Romijn et al.[ | Kazemi et al.[ |
|---|---|---|---|
| Appropriateness and focus of study question | + | + | + |
| Assignment to treatment groups is randomized | + | + | + |
| Adequate concealment of allocation | + | + | + |
| Patients, clinicians and assessors are blinded | + | + | + |
| Similarity of groups at baseline | ? | – | + |
| Comparability of groups during treatment period | + | + | + |
| Use of standardized outcome measure | + | + | + |
| Intent-to-treat analysis | + | + | + |
| Comparability between study sites | n/a | n/a | n/a |
| Overall assessment or risk of bias | low/moderate | low/moderate | low |
Figure 2.Forest plot showing standardized mean difference in depressive symptoms, comparing probiotic and placebo.