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Synbiotic Supplementation for Chronic Constipation in Patients Under Peritoneal Dialysis: An Italian Multicenter Prospective Study.

Gennaro Argentino, Giuseppe Paribello, Andrea Foderini, Federica Marzano, Maria Amicone et al.
Other Journal of renal nutrition : the official journal of the Council on Renal Nutrition of the National Kidney Foundation 2025
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
Other
Tamaño de muestra
70
Población
Peritoneal dialysis patients with chronic constipation
Duración
16 weeks
Intervención
Synbiotic Supplementation for Chronic Constipation in Patients Under Peritoneal Dialysis: An Italian Multicenter Prospective Study. None
Comparador
None (single-arm study)
Resultado primario
Constipation scoring system change
Dirección del efecto
Positive
Riesgo de sesgo
High

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Chronic constipation is prevalent in patients undergoing peritoneal dialysis (PD), raising the risk of catheter malfunction and transmural peritonitis. Gut dysbiosis in dialysis patients can worsen constipation. METHODS: A single-arm prospective study was performed to assess the effectiveness of synbiotic (fructo-oligosaccharides and Lactobacillus casei, Lactobacillus rhamnosus, Lactobacillus reuteri, and Saccharomyces boulardii) supplementation for 16 weeks in PD patients suffering from chronic constipation. The endpoints were the changes in the constipation scoring system and in laxative use. RESULTS: Out of 106 patients, 76 patients experienced chronic constipation and 70 completed the study. After 16 weeks of synbiotic supplementation, a significant improvement in constipation score was found (-5.3; 95% CI: -5.9/-4.7; P = .001) associated with suspension (36.8%) or reduction (42.1%) of laxatives among baseline users (57/70). The findings were not influenced by age, sex, diabetes, obesity, type of PD, residual diuresis, multidrug therapy, and severe constipation at baseline. CONCLUSIONS: Synbiotic supplementation is associated with constipation relief and reduction in laxatives use.

TL;DR

Synbiotic supplementation is associated with constipation relief and reduction in laxatives use and is associated with constipation relief and reduction in laxatives use in patients suffering from chronic constipation.

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