Gong Chao, Xu Shengyong, Pan Youlong, Guo Shigong, Walline Joseph Harold, Wang Xue, Lu Xin, Yu Shiyuan, Qin Mubing, Zhu Huadong, Gao Yanxia, Li Yi
Emergency Department, the State Key Laboratory for Complex, Severe and Rare Diseases, Peking Union Medical College Hospital, Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100730, China.
Emergency Department, Qinghai Cardio-cerebrovascular Specialty Hospital, Xining 810012, China.
World J Emerg Med. 2025;16(1):18-27. doi: 10.5847/wjem.j.1920-8642.2025.018.
Sepsis, a common acute and critical disease, leads to 11 million deaths annually worldwide. Probiotics are living microorganisms that are beneficial to the host and may benefit sepsis outcomes, but their effects are still inconclusive. This study aimed to evaluate the overall effect of probiotics on the prognosis of patients with sepsis.
We searched several sources for published/presented studies, including PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, the Cochrane Library and the US National Library of Medicine Clinical Trials Register (www.clinicaltrials.gov) updated through July 30, 2023, to identify all relevant randomized controlled trials (RCTs) or observational studies that assessed the effectiveness of probiotics or synbiotics in patients with sepsis and reported mortality. We focused primarily on mortality during the study period and analyzed secondary outcomes, including 28-day mortality, in-intensive care unit (ICU) mortality and other outcomes.
Data from 405 patients in five RCTs and 108 patients in one cohort study were included in the analysis. The overall quality of the studies was satisfactory, but clinical heterogeneity existed. All adult studies reported a tendency for probiotics to reduce the mortality of patients with sepsis, and most studies reported a decreasing trend in the incidence of infectious complications, length of ICU stay and duration of antibiotic use. There was only one RCT involving children.
Probiotics show promise for improving the prognosis of patients with sepsis, including reducing mortality and the incidence of infectious complications, particularly in adult patients. Despite the limited number of studies, especially in children, these findings will be encouraging for clinical practice in the treatment of sepsis and suggest that gut microbiota-targeted therapy may improve the prognosis of patients with sepsis.
脓毒症是一种常见的急危重症疾病,全球每年导致1100万人死亡。益生菌是对宿主有益的活微生物,可能对脓毒症的预后有益,但其效果仍不明确。本研究旨在评估益生菌对脓毒症患者预后的总体影响。
我们检索了多个来源的已发表/已展示的研究,包括PubMed、EMBASE、科学网、Cochrane图书馆以及截至2023年7月30日更新的美国国立医学图书馆临床试验注册库(www.clinicaltrials.gov),以识别所有评估益生菌或合生元对脓毒症患者有效性并报告死亡率的相关随机对照试验(RCT)或观察性研究。我们主要关注研究期间的死亡率,并分析次要结局,包括28天死亡率、重症监护病房(ICU)死亡率和其他结局。
分析纳入了5项RCT中405例患者的数据和1项队列研究中108例患者的数据。研究的总体质量令人满意,但存在临床异质性。所有成人研究均报告益生菌有降低脓毒症患者死亡率的趋势,大多数研究报告感染并发症发生率、ICU住院时间和抗生素使用时间呈下降趋势。仅有1项涉及儿童的RCT。
益生菌有望改善脓毒症患者的预后,包括降低死亡率和感染并发症的发生率,尤其是在成年患者中。尽管研究数量有限,特别是在儿童中,但这些发现将为脓毒症治疗的临床实践带来鼓舞,并表明针对肠道微生物群的治疗可能改善脓毒症患者的预后。