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Probiotics Evaluation in Oncological Surgery: A Systematic Review of 36 Randomized Controlled Trials Assessing 21 Diverse Formulations

Elise Cogo, Mohamed H. El‐Sayed, Vivian Liang, Kieran Cooley, Christilynn Guerin, Athanasios Psihogios, Peter Papadogianis

2021Current Oncology15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Objectives were to evaluate probiotics safety and efficacy in oncological surgery. Methods: Systematic review methodology guided by Cochrane, PRISMA, SWiM, and CIOMS. Protocol registered on PROSPERO (CRD42018086168). Results: 36 RCTs (on 3305 participants) and 6 nonrandomized/observational studies were included, mainly on digestive system cancers. There was evidence of a beneficial effect on preventing infections, with 70% of RCTs’ (21/30) direction of effect favoring probiotics. However, five RCTs (17%) favored controls for infections, including one trial with RR 1.57 (95% CI: 0.79, 3.12). One RCT that changed (balanced) its antibiotics protocol after enrolling some participants had mortality risk RR 3.55 (95% CI: 0.77, 16.47; 7/64 vs. 2/65 deaths). The RCT identified with the most promising results overall administered an oral formulation of Lactobacillus acidophilus LA-5 + Lactobacillus plantarum + Bifidobacterium lactis BB-12 + Saccharomyces boulardii. Methodological quality appraisals revealed an overall substantial risk-of-bias, with only five RCTs judged as low risk-of-bias. Conclusions: This large evidence synthesis found encouraging results from most formulations, though this was contrasted by potential harms from a few others, thus validating the literature that “probiotics” are not homogeneous microorganisms. Given microbiome developments and infections morbidity, further high-quality research is warranted using those promising probiotics identified herein.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineSaccharomyces boulardiiRandomized controlled trialObservational studySystematic reviewProbioticLactobacillus acidophilusMicrobiomeQuality of evidenceInternal medicineRelative riskMEDLINEIntensive care medicineBioinformaticsGeneticsPolitical scienceConfidence intervalLawBacteriaBiologyGut microbiota and healthProbiotics and Fermented FoodsHelicobacter pylori-related gastroenterology studies