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The effects of synbiotics on the liver steatosis, inflammation, and gut microbiome of metabolic dysfunction-associated liver disease patients-randomized trial.

Miloš Mitrović, Ana Dobrosavljević, Olga Odanović, Tamara Knežević-Ivanovski, Đorđe Kralj et al.
RCT Romanian journal of internal medicine = Revue roumaine de medecine interne 2024 20 件の引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究タイプ
Randomized Controlled Trial
サンプルサイズ
84
対象集団
MASLD patients (ATT>0.63, elevated ALT)
期間
12 weeks
介入
The effects of synbiotics on the liver steatosis, inflammation, and gut microbiome of metabolic dysfunction-associated liver disease patients-randomized trial. 64x10^9 CFU + 6.4g inulin
比較対照
Placebo
主要アウトカム
Liver steatosis (ATT) and inflammation (hs-CRP)
効果の方向
Positive
バイアスリスク
Low

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Metabolic Dysfunction-associated Liver Disease (MASLD) represents a spectrum of conditions from simple fat accumulation to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. The possible role of the intestinal microbiome on MASLD development has been in focus. Our study aimed to examine the effects of synbiotics on the liver steatosis, inflammation, and stool microbiome. METHODS: A double-blind, placebo-controlled study was conducted involving 84 MASLD patients, defined by an elastometric attenuation coefficient (ATT) greater than 0.63 dB/cm/MHz with an alanine aminotransferase level above 40 U/L for men and 35 U/L for women. The patients were divided into an intervention group treated with a synbiotic with 64x109 CFU of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium and 6.4g of inulin and a control group treated with a placebo. RESULTS: Using synbiotics for 12 weeks significantly decreased liver steatosis (ΔATT -0.006±0.023 vs -0.016±0.021 dB/cm/MHz, p=0.046). The group of patients treated with synbiotics showed a significant decrease in the level of high-sensitive C-reactive protein (Δhs-CRP 0 vs -0.7 mg/L, p≤0.001). Synbiotics enriched the microbiome of patients in the intervention group with the genera Lactobacillus, Bifidobacterium, Faecalibacterium, and Streptococcus, by 81%, 55%, 51%, and 40%, respectively, with a reduction of Ruminococcus and Enterobacterium by 35% and 40%. Synbiotic treatment significantly shortened the gut transition time (ΔGTT -5h vs. -10h, p=0.031). CONCLUSION: Synbiotics could be an effective and safe option that could have place in MASLD treatment.

要約

Synbiotics could be an effective and safe option that could have place in MASLD treatment and showed a significant decrease in the level of high-sensitive C-reactive protein.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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