Alterations in fecal microbiota composition by probiotic supplementation in healthy adults: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials
University of Copenhagen · Novo Nordisk Foundation
Abstract
The effects of probiotic supplementation on fecal microbiota composition in healthy adults have not been well established. We aimed to provide a systematic review of the potential evidence for an effect of probiotic supplementation on the composition of human fecal microbiota as assessed by high-throughput molecular approaches in randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of healthy adults.
The survey of peer-reviewed papers was performed on 17 August 2015 by a literature search through PubMed, SCOPUS, and ISI Web of Science. Additional papers were identified by checking references of relevant papers. Search terms included healthy adult, probiotic, bifidobacterium, lactobacillus, gut microbiota, fecal microbiota, intestinal microbiota, intervention, and (clinical) trial. RCTs of solely probiotic supplementation and placebo in healthy adults that examined alteration in composition of overall fecal microbiota structure assessed by shotgun metagenomic sequencing, 16S ribosomal RNA sequencing, or phylogenetic microarray methods were included. Independent collection and quality assessment of studies were performed by two authors using predefined criteria including methodological quality assessment of reports of the clinical trials based on revised tools from PRISMA/Cochrane and by the Jadad score.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 28.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 57
Authors
6- NBNadja B. KristensenCorresponding
University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk Foundation
- TBThomas Bryrup
Novo Nordisk Foundation, University of Copenhagen
- KHKristine H. Allin
University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk Foundation
- TNTrine Nielsen
University of Copenhagen, Novo Nordisk Foundation
- THTue H. Hansen
Novo Nordisk Foundation, University of Copenhagen
Topics & keywords
- Probiotic
- Feces
- Randomized controlled trial
- Medicine
- Gut flora
- Biology
- Physiology
- Internal medicine