The effect of synbiotic adjunct therapy on clinical and paraclinical outcomes in hospitalized COVID‐19 patients: A randomized placebo‐controlled trial

Author:

Vaezi Mahsa1,Ravanshad Sahar1,Akbari Rad Mina1,Zarrinfar Hossein2,Kabiri Mona345ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

2. Allergy Research Center Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

3. Nanotechnology Research Center, Pharmaceutical Technology Institute Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

4. Department of Pharmaceutical Nanotechnology, School of Pharmacy Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

5. Clinical Research Development Unit, Ghaem Hospital Mashhad University of Medical Sciences Mashhad Iran

Abstract

AbstractTherapeutic approaches with immune‐modulatory effects such as probiotics and prebiotics adjuvant therapy may be essential to combat against COVID‐19 pandemic. The present trial aimed to reveal the efficacy of synbiotic supplementation on clinical and paraclinical outcomes of hospitalized COVID‐19 patients. The current randomized placebo‐controlled trial enrolled 78 hospitalized patients with confirmed COVID‐19 infection. Participants were randomly allocated to intervention and control groups that received synbiotic or placebo capsules twice daily for 2 weeks, respectively. The synbiotic capsule contains multi‐strain probiotics such as Lactobacillus (L.) rhamnosus, L. helveticus, L. casei, Bifidobacterium (B.) lactis, L. acidophilus, B. breve, L. bulgaricus, B. longum, L. plantarum, B. bifidum, L. gasseri, and Streptococcus (S.) thermophilus (109 CFU), as well as fructooligosaccharides prebiotic agent. Besides COVID‐19 clinical features, levels of proinflammatory interleukin‐6 (IL‐6), C‐reactive protein (CRP), erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR), liver and renal function markers, as well as hematological parameters, were assessed during follow‐up. The serum level of IL‐6 was significantly decreased in the intervention group compared to the placebo after 2 weeks of intervention (p = 0.002). A significant difference was found regarding the count of white blood cells (WBC) within the synbiotic group from pre to post‐treatment (p = 0.004). The levels of ESR (p = 0.935) and CRP (p = 0.952) had a higher reduction trend in the synbiotic group relative to the placebo, with no significant between‐group differences. Other findings had no statistical differences between groups. Our results provide the support that synbiotic adjuvant therapy for 2 weeks can be effective to modulate inflammatory responses against COVID‐19 infection.

Funder

Mashhad University of Medical Sciences

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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