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Effects of Bifidobacterium longum 35624 in Children and Adolescents with Irritable Bowel Syndrome.

Sylvia Cruchet Muñoz, Sandra Verbeke Palma, Lydia Lera Marqués, María Nelly Espinosa Pizarro, Jacqueline Malig Mechasqui et al.
Other Nutrients 2024 4 citations
PubMed DOI PDF
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Study Design

Study Type
Randomized Controlled Trial
Population
IBS patients
Duration
12 weeks
Intervention
Effects of Bifidobacterium longum 35624 in Children and Adolescents with Irritable Bowel Syndrome. None
Comparator
None
Primary Outcome
GI symptoms
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
Moderate

Abstract

Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and vitamin D deficiency are common among children in Latin America. Previous studies show that Bifidobacterium longum35624TM improves IBS symptoms in adults. This real-world, single-arm, open-label study conducted in Chile investigated the effects of B. longum 35624 (1 × 109 colony-forming units, 12 weeks) on gastrointestinal symptoms (adapted IBS severity scoring system [IBS-SSS]; adapted Questionnaire on Pediatric Gastrointestinal Symptoms [QPGS], and Bristol Stool Form Scale) in 64 children and adolescents (8-18 years) and explored the relationship with baseline vitamin D status. Improvements in all IBS-SSS domains and composite score were observed at week 6 and 12 (p < 0.0007 versus baseline), with 98.3% of participants experiencing numerical improvements in ≥3 domains. Clinically meaningful improvement was seen in 96.6% of participants. The distribution of IBS-SSS severity categories shifted from moderate/severe at baseline to mild/remission (p < 0.0001). Improvements were not maintained during the two-week washout. Low baseline serum vitamin D levels did not correlate to IBS severity or probiotic response. QPGS significantly decreased from baseline to week 6 (p = 0.0005) and 12 (p = 0.02). B. longum 35624 may improve IBS symptoms in children and adolescents, even those with vitamin D deficiency. A confirmatory randomized controlled trial and further exploration of probiotic response and vitamin D status are needed.

TL;DR

A confirmatory randomized controlled trial and further exploration of probiotic response and vitamin D status are needed to improve IBS symptoms in children and adolescents, even those with vitamin D deficiency.

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