Division of Pulmonary, Critical Care, and Sleep Medicine, Creighton University School of Medicine, Omaha, NE.
Department of Anesthesiology and Surgery, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
Chest. 2017 Feb;151(2):492-499. doi: 10.1016/j.chest.2016.10.006. Epub 2016 Oct 19.
Clinicians have traditionally dichotomized bacteria as friendly commensals or harmful pathogens. However, the line separating the two has become blurred with the recognition that the intestinal microbiome is a complex entity in which species can shift sides-from friend to foe and back again-based on crucial factors in their local environment. Significant disruptions in the homeostasis of the microbiome, a phenomenon called dysbiosis, is increasingly associated with a host of untoward effects. Patients in the ICU are at high risk for dysbiosis given the high rate of antibiotic use, acute changes in diet, and the stress of critical illness. Probiotics are living microbes of human origin that when ingested in sufficient quantities, can colonize sites such as the oropharynx and GI tract and provide benefits to the host. In recent years, we have increasingly explored the utility of using probiotics to reverse the intestinal dysbiosis associated with critical illness, thereby reducing select ICU complications associated with increased morbidity and mortality. Although these preliminary efforts have demonstrated varying degrees of success, our present studies suffer from a host of limitations that hinder the strength of their conclusions and the generalizability of their results. Probiotic investigations have been further hobbled by current regulatory requirements, which were designed to serve as the framework for pharmaceutical research. Although such measures are intended to ensure patient safety, they inadvertently impose barriers that stifle innovation regarding nutraceuticals. This review strives to summarize the current evidence regarding the efficacy and safety of probiotics in the ICU as well as to provide an overview of the obstacles probiotic researchers face going forward.
临床医生传统上将细菌分为友好共生菌或有害病原体。然而,随着人们认识到肠道微生物组是一个复杂的实体,其中物种可以根据其局部环境中的关键因素从友好的一方转变为有害的一方,再转变回来,两者之间的界限变得模糊了。微生物组的内稳态显著失调,即所谓的生态失调,与许多不良后果越来越相关。由于抗生素的高使用率、饮食的急剧变化以及重症疾病的压力,重症监护病房 (ICU) 的患者处于生态失调的高风险中。益生菌是源自人类的活微生物,当摄入足够数量时,可以定植于口咽和胃肠道等部位,并为宿主提供益处。近年来,我们越来越多地探索使用益生菌来逆转与重症相关的肠道生态失调,从而减少与发病率和死亡率增加相关的特定 ICU 并发症。尽管这些初步努力取得了不同程度的成功,但我们目前的研究受到诸多限制,这些限制阻碍了其结论的强度和结果的普遍性。益生菌研究还受到当前监管要求的阻碍,这些要求旨在作为药物研究的框架。尽管这些措施旨在确保患者安全,但它们无意中为营养品的创新设置了障碍。这篇综述旨在总结益生菌在 ICU 中的疗效和安全性的现有证据,并概述益生菌研究人员面临的障碍。