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http://dx.doi.org/10.3345/cep.2019.00381

Synbiotics use for preventing sepsis and necrotizing enterocolitis in very low birth weight neonates: a randomized controlled trial  

Pehlevan, Ozge Serce (Neonatology Unit, Zeynep Kamil Maternity and Children's Training and Research Hospital, University of Health Sciences)
Benzer, Derya (Neonatology Unit, Zeynep Kamil Maternity and Children's Training and Research Hospital, University of Health Sciences)
Gursoy, Tugba (Neonatology Unit, Koc University School of Medicine)
Karatekin, Guner (Neonatology Unit, Zeynep Kamil Maternity and Children's Training and Research Hospital, University of Health Sciences)
Ovali, Fahri (Neonatology Unit, Zeynep Kamil Maternity and Children's Training and Research Hospital, University of Health Sciences)
Publication Information
Clinical and Experimental Pediatrics / v.63, no.6, 2020 , pp. 226-231 More about this Journal
Abstract
Background: Probiotics and prebiotics have strain-specific effects on the host. Synbiotics, a mixture of probiotics and prebiotics, are proposed to have more beneficial effects on the host than either agent has alone. Purpose: We performed a randomized controlled trial to investigate the effect of Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium together with oligosaccharides and lactoferrin on the development of necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) or sepsis in very low birth weight neonates. Methods: Neonates with a gestational age ≤32 weeks and birth weight ≤1,500 g were enrolled. The study group received a combination of synbiotics and lactoferrin, whereas the control group received 1 mL of distilled water as placebo starting with the first feed until discharge. The outcome measures were the incidence of NEC stage ≥2 or late-onset cultureproven sepsis and NEC stage ≥2 or death. Results: Mean birth weight and gestational age of the study (n=104) and the control (n=104) groups were 1,197±235 g vs. 1,151±269 g and 29±1.9 vs. 28±2.2 weeks, respectively (P>0.05). Neither the incidence of NEC stage ≥2 or death, nor the incidence of NEC stage ≥2 or late-onset culture-proven sepsis differed between the study and control groups (5.8% vs. 5.9%, P=1; 26% vs. 21.2%, P=0.51). The only significant difference was the incidence of all stages of NEC (1.9% vs. 10.6%, P=0.019). Conclusion: The combination of synbiotics and lactoferrin did not reduce NEC severity, sepsis, or mortality.
Keywords
Necrotizing enterocolitis; Sepsis; Synbiotics; Very low birth weight infant;
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