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REVIEW |
1 Primary Industries Research Victoria, Department of Primary Industries, Werribee, Victoria, Australia and Institute of Food, Nutrition and Human Health, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand
2 Digestive System Research Unit, University Hospital Vall dHebron, Barcelona, Spain
Correspondence to:
Professor Harsharnjit S Gill
Primary Industries Research Victoria-Werribee Centre, Department of Primary Industries, 600 Sneydes Road, Werribee, VIC 3030, Australia; harsharn.gill{at}dpi.vic.gov.au
Submitted 27 November 2003
Accepted 26 February 2004
| ABSTRACT |
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Abbreviations: cfu, colony forming units; IL, interleukin; NK, natural killer (cells); SCORAD, SCORing Atopic Dermatitis (score); TNF-
, tumour necrosis factor-
Keywords: probiotics; lactobacillus
The human gastrointestinal tract is home to diverse and vast communities of micro-organisms representing over 400 cultivable species. The colonisation of the gastrointestinal tract begins immediately after birth. The mode of delivery, use of antibiotics, and the level of hygiene are known to exert a significant influence on the number and species of micro-organisms that colonise the gut. At first Escherichia coli and streptococcus dominates, but in breast fed infants the number of bifidobacteria increases while those of E coli, streptococcus, and clostridia decreases.1 A change to the adult flora occurs after weaning and by the second year of life the intestinal flora becomes similar to that of an adult2 and remains relatively stable throughout life. The density and diversity of microbes increases progressively from stomach (1023 colony forming units (cfu)/g lumenal contents) to colon (101112 cfu/g lumenal contents). In a healthy adult, the gastrointestinal tract contains 10 times as many bacteria (1014 bacteria) as eukaryotic cells in the entire body1; the combined genome of the intestinal flora is estimated to be 50100 times the size of the human genome.3 As these organisms are metabolically active and interact continuously with their environment (including other bacteria, the gut epithelium, mucosal immune system, the central nervous system, and the endocrine system), they are able to exert a significant influence on the postnatal development and the host physiology4; the metabolic activity of microflora is considered to be equal to that of liver.5
While a majority of the indigenous flora are benign or exhibit health promoting properties, some possess the potential to cause disease. For example, bifidobacteria and lactobacilli are associated with health, while clostridia are considered detrimental to health. Normally, a balance exists between pro-health and anti-health organisms. However, when this delicate ecological balance is perturbed by environmental or physiological factors, predisposition to infectious and immunoinflammatory diseases is enhanced. Research over the past two decades has provided evidence that administration of probiotics could be used to optimise gut flora and to prevent and treat a range of diseases. Probiotics are defined as live micro-organisms which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the host. Bifidobacteria and lactobacilli are commonly used as probiotics. Consumption of specific strains of probiotics is associated with a range of health benefits,6 although strong scientific evidence exists only for a small number of conditions. The health benefits supported by adequate clinical data or promising animal data include prevention and treatment of diarrhoeal disease (acute infantile diarrhoea, antibiotic associated diarrhoea, nosocomial infections), prevention of systemic infections, management of inflammatory bowel disease, immunomodulation, prevention and treatment of allergies, anticancer effects, treatment of cholesterolaemia, and alleviation of lactose intolerance.
| Probiotics are defined as live micro-organisms which when administered in adequate amounts confer a health benefit on the host.
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| PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF DIARRHOEAL DISEASE |
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Box 1: Gut flora
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Nosocomial diarrhoea is a major problem in paediatric hospitals worldwide. Prophylactic use of probiotics has proven useful for the prevention of acute diarrhoea in infants admitted into the hospital ward for a chronic disease condition. In a double blind, placebo controlled trial, Saavedra and coworkers showed that supplementation of an infant formula with Bifidobacterium bifidum and Streptococcus thermophilus reduced the incidence of diarrhoea (7% v 31%) and rotavirus shedding (10% v 39%) in hospitalised infants aged 524 months.10 In another placebo controlled double blind study, oral administration of L rhamnosus strain GG to infants (136 months old), hospitalised for reasons other than diarrhoea, reduced the risk of nosocomial diarrhoea (6.7% v 33.3%) and rotavirus gastroenteritis (2.2% v 16.7%).11 Prevalence of rotavirus infection was not influenced by probiotic treatment but the risk of symptomatic rotavirus enteritis was significantly reduced. A third published clinical trial on nosocomial diarrhoea in infants (118 months old) showed no statistically significant benefit of Lactobacillus GG intake,12 but the rate of symptomatic rotavirus enteritis in the probiotic arm (13.2%) was found to be lower than in the placebo arm (20.8%).
Probiotics may also be useful in the prevention of community acquired diarrhoea. The study by Oberhelman and coworkers13 included 204 infants (624 months old) from an indigent periurban town who were followed up over a 15 month period. Significantly fewer episodes of diarrhoea per child per year were observed in children given Lactobacillus GG supplemented gelatin than in the placebo (control) group. In a multicentre, randomised, double blind trial,14 conducted over four months with 928 healthy children aged 624 months, the incidence of acute diarrhoea was significantly reduced by supplementation with Lactobacillus casei fermented milk (15.9%) as compared with yogurt (22%). Several studies have investigated the efficacy of probiotics in the prevention of travellers diarrhoea in adults, but methodological deficiencies, such as low compliance with the treatment and problems with the follow up, limit the validity of their conclusions.15
The benefit of probiotics as a treatment for acute diarrhoea in children has also been demonstrated. Probiotics such as Lactobacillus reuteri, Lactobacillus GG, L casei, and S boulardii have proven useful in reducing the duration of acute diarrhoea in controlled clinical trials. Three meta-analyses of controlled clinical trials have been published.1618 The results of the systematic reviews are consistent and suggest that probiotics are safe and effective. Probiotic therapy shortens the duration of acute diarrhoeal illness in children by approximately one day.
| TREATMENT OF HELICOBACTER PYLORI INFECTION |
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Mechanisms of action
Several mechanisms (producing antimicrobial substances, stimulating mucus secretion, strengthening gut barrier function, competing for adhesion sites, stimulating specific and non-specific immune responses, etc) by which probiotics mediate their anti-infection effects have been suggested.21 However, the relative importance of these mechanisms remains unknown.
| PREVENTION OF SYSTEMIC INFECTIONS |
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Probiotics have been used to prevent sepsis in patients with severe acute pancreatitis. In a randomised double blind trial, patients were treated with either Lactobacillus plantarum or placebo. Incidence of infected pancreatic necrosis and abscesses were observed at a significantly lower rate in L plantarum treated patients than in the control group.23
A randomised study involving 95 liver transplant patients compared the incidence of infections among three groups of patients submitted to different prophylaxis procedures: selective bowel decontamination with antibiotics, administration of live L plantarum with fermentable fibre, and administration of heat killed L plantarum plus the fibre supplement. Postoperative infections were recorded in 15 out of 32 patients (48%) in the antibiotics group, four out of 31 (13%) in the live L plantarum group, and 11 out of 32 (34%) in the heat killed L plantarum group, being significant the difference between antibiotics and live L plantarum groups.24 In a second study with liver transplant patients recently concluded by the same group in Berlin, patients were randomised to receive a synbiotic preparation (including four probiotic strains: Pediococcus pentoseceus, Leuconostoc mesenteroides, Lactobacillus paracasei, and L plantarum and four fermentable fibres: ß-glucan, inulin, pectin, and resistant starch) or a placebo consisting of the four fibres only. Postoperative infection occurred in only one patient in the treatment group (n = 33), in contrast to 17 out of 33 in the placebo group.25 Early administration of live probiotics may become a useful and effective therapeutic alternative to prevent postoperative infections, as opposed to prophylaxis with antibiotics.
Management of inflammatory bowel diseases
Crohns disease, ulcerative colitis, and pouchitis are chronic conditions of unknown aetiology. Evidence suggests that abnormal activation of the mucosal immune system against the enteric flora is the key event triggering inflammatory mechanisms, that induce mucosal injury and perpetuate intestinal lesions to chronicity. Patients show an increased mucosal secretion of IgG antibodies against commensal bacteria,26 and mucosal T-lymphocytes are hyper-reactive against antigens of the common flora, suggesting that local tolerance mechanisms are abrogated.27 In Crohns disease, faecal stream diversion has been shown to prevent recurrence of mucosal lesions, whereas infusion of intestinal contents activated the lesions.28 In ulcerative colitis, treatment with an enteric coated preparation of broad spectrum antibiotics reduced metabolic activity of the flora and mucosal inflammation.29
Experimental studies based on co-culture of non-pathogenic bacteria with human intestinal mucosa have shown that different bacteria elicit different types of cytokine response. In Crohns disease, a commensal E coli strain stimulates the release of tumour necrosis factor-
(TNF-
) and interleukin (IL)-8 by the inflamed mucosa.30 However, some lactobacillus strains including L casei downregulate the spontaneous release of TNF-
by inflamed tissue, and also the inflammatory response induced by E coli.30,31 The anti-inflammatory effect of L casei is transduced to the underlying tissue and results in reduced expression of activation markers by lamina propria T-lymphocytes,30 suggesting that signals generated at the mucosal surface can promote changes in the phenotype of lamina propria lymphocytes. A balanced local microecology could restore immune homoeostasis in Crohns disease.
Probiotics have been tested in animal models of bowel inflammation. Mice deficient of the IL-10 gene spontaneously develop colitis. Oral administration of either VSL#3, a mixture of eight bacteria strains, or L plantarum significantly decreased histological colitis score in this animal model.32,33 However, the same L plantarum strain failed to reduce the severity of colitis in the TNBS model in the rat.34 A bacterium genetically engineered to secrete the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 prevented the onset of colitis in the IL-10 knockout mouse model.35 The prebiotic inulin increases counts of lactobacilli and bifidobacteria in the colonic lumen. The effect of inulin was tested in the rat model of distal colitis induced by dextran sodium sulphate, a model that resembles human ulcerative colitis.36 Oral inulin prevented mucosal inflammation, as evidenced by lower colonic lesion scores, lower release of inflammatory mediators, and lower tissue myeloperoxidase activity in test rats as compared with controls.
In ulcerative colitis, two randomised controlled trials investigated the effectiveness of an orally administered enteric coated preparation of viable E coli strain Nissle 1917 as compared with mesalazine, the standard treatment for maintenance of remission.37,38 These two studies concluded that the non-pathogenic E coli strain has an equivalent effect to mesalazine in maintaining remission. The same probiotic product was tested for efficacy in maintaining remission in 28 patients with colonic Crohns disease.39 This placebo controlled study showed a lower rate of relapse (33% v 63%) in the probiotic group than in controls.
The VSL#3 mixture mentioned above has proven highly effective for maintenance of remission of chronic relapsing pouchitis, after induction of remission with antibiotics.40 In this study, a relapse occurred in only three out of 20 patients of the VSL#3 group and in all the 20 patients of the placebo group. Of interest, all patients on remission in the probiotic arm had relapses within four months after stopping treatment at conclusion of the trial. Treatment with VSL#3 is also effective in the prevention of the onset of pouchitis after ileal pouch-anal anastomosis.41 Results of a controlled trial published in abstract form suggest that VSL#3 is better than mesalazine in the prevention of postoperative recurrence of Crohns disease at one year.42
The efficacy of Lactobacillus GG in postoperative recurrence of Crohns disease has been tested in a randomised, double blind trial. The probiotic showed no effect in the prevention of clinical and endoscopic recurrence as compared with placebo.43Lactobacillus GG also had no effect, as a primary therapy, on clinical or endoscopic responses in patients with chronic pouchitis.44 Another study included 32 patients with quiescent Crohns disease and tested S boulardii for maintenance of remission as a coadjuvant therapy added to standard mesalazine. Clinical relapse rate was higher in the group treated with mesalazine alone.45 Finally, the prebiotic inulin has been tested in patients with an ileal pouch-anal anastomosis. Compared with placebo, three weeks of dietary supplementation with inulin reduced endoscopic and histological parameters of inflammation of the mucosa of the ileal reservoir.46 The effect was associated with an increase in faecal butyrate and a decrease in bacteroides counts.
Although initial open label studies showed promising prospects, with the exception of the studies on pouchitis, published results of controlled clinical trials in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases are poor (see Tamboli for an extensive review of published trials47). We need further research on mechanisms of action in order to optimise the use of probiotics or prebiotics for these indications.
| PREVENTION AND TREATMENT OF ATOPIC DISEASES |
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Probiotics and the prevention of allergic diseases
The effectiveness of probiotic therapy in the prevention of allergic diseases has been demonstrated in two randomised controlled trials. Lodinova-Zadnikova et al investigated the preventive efficacy of at birth colonisation with a probiotic (non-enteropathogenic) E coli.52 The incidence of allergies was assessed using a questionnaire both after 20 years (150 full term) and 10 years (77 preterm infants) after colonisation. Subjects colonised with E coli were found to have significantly lower incidence of allergies, compared with the control subjects, both after 10 and 20 years. In the second randomised, double blind, placebo controlled study, Kalliomaki et al demonstrated the effectiveness of Lactobacillus GG in the prevention of early atopic disease in children at high risk.53Lactobacillus GG supplementation prenatally to mothers (for two weeks) with a family history of atopy and postnatally to their infants for six months significantly reduced the incidence of atopic eczema (p = 0.008) during the first two years life, compared with the placebo group. The frequency of atopic eczema in the probiotic supplemented group (15 of 64, 23%) was half that of the placebo group (31 of 68, 46%). Re-examination of the cohort at the age of 4 years has further shown that the preventive effect of Lactobacillus GG on atopic eczema extends beyond infancy54; 14 of 53 children receiving Lactobacillus GG had developed atopic eczema, compared with 25 of 54 receiving placebo (relative risk 0.57, 95% confidence interval 0.33 to 0.97). Interestingly, however, supplementation had no effect on skin prick test and the induction of IgE (as measured by in vitro IgE test). This may suggest that probiotic therapy does not protect against IgE mediated sensitisation.51
Probiotics and the management of allergic diseases
The ability of bacterial therapy to reduce the symptoms of food allergy was first highlighted by Loskutova55 and Ciprandi et al.56 Since then, several well designed studies have provided evidence that supplementation with specific strains of probiotics could be effective in the management of atopic disorders.
Majamaa and Isolauri examined the efficacy of extensively hydrolysed whey formula supplemented with Lactobacillus GG in infants with atopic eczema and cows milk allergy.57 In a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled trial, subjects receiving formula with Lactobacillus GG (n = 13) showed significant improvement in clinical symptoms (SCORing Atopic Dermatitis (SCORAD) score) and markers of intestinal inflammation (indicated by significant decreases in the concentrations of faecal
-antitrypsin and TNF-
) compared with the placebo group given formula without probiotics (n = 14). Similar effects of probiotic therapy were reported in another randomised, double blind, placebo controlled study by the same authors58 in which breast fed infants (n = 27) with atopic eczema were weaned onto an extensively hydrolysed whey formula containing Lactobacillus GG or Bb12 or without probiotics. After two months, infants receiving whey formula with probiotics showed significant improvements in the extent and severity of atopic eczema (SCORAD score: 0 for Lactobacillus GG, 1 for Bb 12 and 13 for placebo group) and reduction in inflammatory responses (as indicated by reductions in the concentration of soluble CD4 in serum and eosinophilic protein X in urine) compared with the placebo groups.58 Expression of cell surface receptors and the production of chemotactic factors remained unchanged. These findings have also been recently confirmed by Rosenfeldt et al.59 In a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled crossover study, 56% of atopic children (to 13 years old) receiving L rhamnosus 190702 and L reutri DSM 122460 for six weeks showed improvement of the eczema compared with only 15% in the placebo group; during the active treatment the extent of eczema decreased from a mean of 18.2% to 13.7% (p = 0.02). However, the total SCORAD index showed no significant change. Interestingly, the treatment response was more pronounced in subjects with raised IgE levels and a positive skin prick test response. From these studies, it could be concluded that specific probiotic strains might be effective in the management of allergies. Effectiveness of viable but not heat inactivated probiotics in the management of atopic eczema and cows milk allergy60 and an association between the consumption of fermented milk products and a decrease in allergic symptoms has also been reported.61
However, little is known about the efficacy of probiotics in preventing allergic disorders in other age groups. Helin et al examined the effect of probiotic supplementation in young adults or teenagers with birch pollen or apple allergy.62Lactobacillus GG therapy for 5.5 months (before, during, and after the pollen birch season) failed to mitigate the symptoms of allergy or reduce the use of medicine. No benefits were noted in subjects exposed to apple challenge test. In another double blind crossover study involving 15 adults with moderate asthma, supplementation with yoghurt with live L acidophilus or yoghurt with L acidophilus for one month was found to have no beneficial effect on spirometric function.63
In addition to the induction of regulatory T (Tr) cells and counter-regulation by Th1 cells,64 reduced immunogenicity of potential allergens through modification of their structure,65 strengthening of the mucosal defences (production of IgA), stabilisation of gut mucosal barrier and downregulation of inflammatory responses66 by lactic acid bacteria has been suggested to contribute to antiallergy effects of probiotics. It was also reported that the beneficial effects of Lactobacillus GG were associated with increases in transforming growth factor-ß,67 induction of IL-10 production68 and regulation of phagocytic cell function.69
| Probiotic consumption has been shown to downregulate over expressed immune responses in subjects with autoimmune/immunoinflammatory disorders (for example, inflammatory bowel disease, atopic disorders) and to enhance specific aspects of immune function in healthy subjects.
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| ENHANCEMENT OF SPECIFIC PARAMETERS OF IMMUNE FUNCTION |
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The acquired immunity involves T-lymphocytes and B-lymphocytes. B-cells secrete immunoglobulins/specific antibodies, while T-cells provide help for B-cells to produce specific antibodies, and mediate host defence by eliminating intracellular pathogens (that is, by activating macrophages) and by killing virus infected cells. Which of these mechanisms are preferentially activated depends on the nature of the disease causing agent. A successful immune response, however, requires the coordination and participation of both non-specific and specific arms of the immune system as most of the immune competent cells and their products have overlapping and complementary functions.
Probiotics and immune function
The effect of probiotic intake on immune function has been the subject of several recent human studies. There is strong evidence to suggest that specific strains of lactic acid bacteria, when consumed in certain numbers, are able to modulate aspects of both natural and acquired immune responses.
Probiotics and innate immune function
The ability of specific strains of probiotics to enhance aspects of natural immunity in human subjects is well documented. Schiffrin and colleagues reported enhanced phagocytic capacity of peripheral blood leucocytes (polymorphonuclear and monocytes)70 in healthy human adults administered fermented milk supplemented with specific strains of probiotics (Lactobacillus johnsonii La1 or Bifidobacterium lactis Bb12) for three weeks. The improvements in phagocytic activity were sustained for several weeks after cessation of probiotic consumption,7072 and granulocytes showed higher increases in phagocytic cell function compared with monocytes.70,73 Significant increases in the expression of receptors involved in phagocytosis (CR1, CR3, Fc
RI and Fc
R) in neutrophils,69 phagocytic index,74 and oxidative burst73,75 or microbicidal capacity71 in subjects receiving probiotics have also been reported. It has also been observed that different lactic acid bacteria strains differ in their capacity to influence complement receptor expression in phagocytic cells. For example, He et al found that Lactobacillus lactis was more efficient at upregulating complement receptors on blood leucocytes than L rhamnosus.76 Furthermore, the immunostimulatory effect of probiotic intake was dose dependent and a minimum dose of 109 cfu/day was found to be necessary to realise improvements in immune function.73
Ageing is associated with a decline in immunocompetence. It has been suggested that supplementation with probiotic could be used to correct age related decline in phagocytic cell function in the elderly. Subjects receiving milk containing L rhamnosus (HN001) or B lactis (HN019) for three to six weeks were found to exhibit significantly more phagocytically active blood leucocytes (neutrophils and monocytes; fig 1
) than subjects receiving milk without probiotics.72,77,78 Notably, subjects with relatively poor preintervention phagocytic cell function consistently showed higher relative increases in phagocytic activity than subjects with adequate preintervention immune function.77 Furthermore, augmentation in phagocytic activity was found to be correlated with age, with subjects older than 70 years exhibiting significantly greater improvements in phagocytic activity than those under 70 years.77
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Humoral immune responses
A large number of human studies have also shown that the intake of specific strains of lactic acid bacteria is able to potentiate humoral immune responses to natural infections and systemic or oral immunisation. In a randomised, placebo controlled study involving infants with acute rotavirus diarrhoea, Kaila et al observed that a reduced duration of diarrhoea after administration of Lactobacillus GG fermented milk was associated with augmentation of both rotavirus specific and non-specific antibody responses.83 At convalescence, 90% of the Lactobacillus GG group compared with 46% of the placebo group exhibited rotavirus specific IgA antibody secreting cell response. It is important to note, however, that a very low cut off level (0.05 antibody secreting cells/106 cells) was used as an indicator of seroconversion. Significantly higher IgG, IgA, and IgM immunoglobulin secreting cells in Lactobacillus GG fed infants compared with those given a placebo were also observed. Comparison of different strains further revealed that Lactobacillus GG was more efficient at stimulating IgA specific antibody secreting cells to rotavirus and serum IgA responses than L casei subspecies rhamnosus or a combination of S thermophilus and L delbruckii subspecies bulgaricus.84 Furthermore, viable cells were found to be more efficacious at stimulating rotavirus specific immune response than heat inactivated cells.85
Effectiveness of probiotics in enhancing the immunogenicity of mucosal and systemic vaccines has also been reported. Link-Amster and colleagues reported fourfold increase (p = 0.04) in serum IgA antibody response to Salmonella typhi immunisation, in volunteers consuming yoghurt containing B bifidum and L acidophilus La1 compared with a 2.5-fold increases in the control group.86 Enhanced responsiveness (rotavirus specific IgM secreting cells and IgA seroconversion rate) to live oral rotavirus vaccine in infants fed Lactobacillus GG, compared with the control group, has also been reported.87 Supplementation with specific strains of probiotics has also been shown to improve immune responses to immunisation with polioviruses. In a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled study,88 subjects fed yoghurt containing L rhamnosus and L paracasei showed significantly higher virus neutralising antibody responses (mainly IgA) to a live attenuated polioviruses vaccine, compared with subjects given placebo (chemically acidified milk); subjects receiving probiotic yoghurt also exhibited significantly higher polio specific serum IgG and IgA responses. In another study, administration of a formula supplemented with bifidobacteria significantly increased the levels of total faecal IgA and antipoliovirus faecal IgA89 in infants immunised against poliovirus several months before enrolment in the study. Together these observations suggest that specific strains of lactic acid bacteria are endowed with potent adjuvant properties that could be used for improving efficacy of oral vaccines and as immunostimulants to promote recovery from infectious illnesses. Development of immunisation strategies that avoid the use of needles, and non-toxic adjuvants is highly desirable as it will simplify immunisation programmes and reduce barriers to large scale immunisation.
It is to be noted that probiotic administration is also known to induce antibody responses to completely unrelated antigens and to themselves.86,90 Therefore, it is possible that some of specific antibody activity detected in studies described above may in fact be due to non-specific cross reacting antibodies. The mechanisms by which probiotics potentiate humoral immune responses are not known but could be due to increased transport of antigenic materials across the gut and improved antigen-presenting cell function (upregulation of antigen presenting molecules and co-stimulatory molecules induced by proinflammatory cytokines91 and/or increased number of B-cells.92
Although the studies reported above provide evidence of the immunoenhancing effects of certain probiotic strains, further well designed studies are needed to unequivocally demonstrate the efficacy of specific strains; only a small number of studies conducted to date have been randomised, double blind, and/or placebo controlled. Whether consumption over long periods will result in sustained improvements in immune capacity also remains to be determined. Also, little is known about the effective probiotic dose for different population groups, and the relevance of immunoenhancement to increased disease resistance.
The precise mechanisms by which probiotics influence the functioning of the immune system are not fully understood. It appears that recognition of probiotic associated molecular patterns (for example, peptidoglycans, lipotechoic acid, bacterial DNA) by pattern recognition receptors (such as toll-like receptors) present on the surface of immunocompetent cells (monocytes, macrophages, dendritic cells, etc), present in the Peyers patches, lamina propria or other sites triggers the release of a range of cytokines that shape the developing immune response (unresponsiveness or active immune response). Several studies have reported increased production of a vast array of cytokines (for example, IL-1, IL-2, IL-6, IL-10, IL-12, IL-18, TNF-
, interferon-
) following in vitro stimulation of blood leucocytes with lactic acid bacteria and/or oral consumption of probiotics.82,93 These cytokines are known to exert a range of modulatory effects on immune cell function.21 For example, IL-12 and IL-18 induce interferon-
production by T-cells, B-cells and NK cells, and interferon-
enhances phagocyte mediated clearance of microbes, augments cytotoxic capacity of T-cells and NK cells, and stimulates helper T-cell function and augments immunogenicity of vaccines. TNF-
further increases the microbicidal activity of macrophages and exerts cytotoxic effect against tumours. Interferon-
mediates protection against viral and microbial infections and cancers, while IL-1 stimulates proliferation of T-cells and B-cells and IL-6 induces differentiation to antibody-secreting plasma cells. Transforming growth factor-ß and IL-10 possess potent anti-inflammatory properties and play an important part in immune system homoeostasis. IL-2 influences induction and regulation of T-cell mediated immune responses.
| ANTICANCER EFFECTS |
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However, there is little "direct experimental evidence" regarding the anticancer effectiveness (tumour suppression) of probiotic therapy in humans. Aso and colleagues demonstrated the protective effect of L casei strain Shirota on the recurrence of superficial bladder cancer in a randomised, controlled, multicentre study.99 Subjects were enrolled in the study within two weeks after removal of bladder tumours. After one year, tumour recurrence rate was significantly lower in subjects receiving L casei (57%) compared with the control group (83%). Treatment with L casei also delayed the onset of tumour recurrence. Similar observations were made in a second, much larger, placebo controlled study involving 125 patients by Aso and colleagues.100 Increases in the percentage of T-helper cells and NK cells in adult colorectal cancer patients101 suggest that stimulation of the immune system by L casei Shirota may have an important role in the suppression of tumour development.
Carefully designed, long term human studies are needed to verify findings of animal studies and to establish a basis for probiotic therapy in cancer prevention.
| LOWERING OF BLOOD CHOLESTEROL |
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A meta-analysis of controlled short term (48 weeks) studies (n = 6) involving 425 subjects (male and female with different initial cholesterol levels) has shown that consumption of yoghurt containing Enterococcus faecium (Gaio) is effective in reducing both total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol by 4% and 5%, respectively, compared with the control group.106 Whether the effects are sustained over a long time remains to be proven. Subjects given milk fermented with E faecium for 24 weeks showed reduction in serum cholesterol levels at four and 12 weeks but not at 24 (end of the study) and 30 weeks (after the follow up).107 Consumption of Pro Viva (Probi AB, Sweden) food product containing L plantarum 299v (randomised, placebo controlled study) has also been reported to lower total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol in subjects with moderately raised cholesterol levels.108
Furthermore, it has been reported that long term consumption of fermented products enriched with specific strains of lactic acid bacteria may be effective in increasing high density lipoprotein cholesterol. In a single blind parallel study, subjects consuming milk fermented with L casei TMC 0409 and S thermophilus TMC 1543 (200 ml/day) showed significant increases, compared with the pre-intervention levels, in high density lipoprotein levels after four and eight weeks supplementation.109 The levels of triglycerides were also reduced significantly in subjects receiving the fermented milk. No significant changes were noted in the control group. Consumption of 300 g yoghurt supplemented with L acidophilus 145 and Bifidobacterium longum 913 for seven weeks was also found to increase high density lipoprotein concentration by 0.3 mmol/l (p = 0.002) and decrease ratio of low to high density lipoprotein from 3.24 to 2.48 (p = 0.001).110 However, the concentrations of total and low density lipoprotein cholesterol in serum remained unaffected by the consumption of probiotic yoghurt; relatively high fat content of the yoghurt (3.5%) was suggested to be the main reason for the lack of effect.
The precise mechanisms by which probiotics affect cholesterol levels are not fully understood. However, a range of mechanisms include assimilation of cholesterol by bacterial cells, deconjugation of bile acids by bacterial acid hydrolases (reduces cholesterol reabsorption, increases cholesterol excretion of deconjugated bile salts, and increases cholesterol uptake by low density lipoprotein receptor pathway in the liver as a compensatory response), cholesterol binding to bacterial cell walls, and inhibition of hepatic cholesterol synthesis and/or redistribution of cholesterol from plasma to the liver (through the action of short chain fatty acids, the end products of carbohydrate fermentation in the gut).111
| LACTOSE MALABSORPTION |
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| IRRITABLE BOWEL SYNDROME |
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| PROBIOTICS IN EVIDENCE BASED GASTROENTEROLOGY |
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| Box 2: Probiotics in evidence based medicine Grade A recommendation (level 1A evidence)
Grade A recommendation (level 1B evidence)
Grade B recommendation (level 2B evidence)
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| FUTURE PERSPECTIVES |
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| MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTIONS (ANSWERS AT END OF REFERENCES) |
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2. Administration of probiotics is clinically proven (grade A level recommendation; level 1A evidence) to be effective in the prevention of:
3. Best recommendation to subjects with a diagnosis of lactose malabsorption is:
4. People travelling to countries with risk of acute infectious diarrhoea should be advised to:
5. Children attending day care centres or admitted into hospital wards may benefit from regular intake of probiotics in order to:
Box 3: Key references
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