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Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Co.
World J Gastroenterol. Mar 14, 2014; 20(10): 2470-2481
Published online Mar 14, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i10.2470
Table 1 Summary of molecular studies of intestinal microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome
Ref.EthnicityIBS patients, nMean age (range), yrMale gender, nIBS subtype
Controls, nSampleMethodChanges in intestinal microbiota composition in IBS
IBS-CIBS-DIBS-M
Malinen et al[83] 2005Finland2746.5 (20-65)7912622 (age, gender matching)FecesqPCR covering bacteria 300 bacterial speciesIBS-D: ↓ lactobacillus spp.
IBS-C: ↑ veillonella spp.
Overall IBS: ↓ clostridium coccoides subgroup, Bifidobacterium catenulatum group
Mättö et al[46] 2005Finland2646 (20-65)7912525 (age, gender matching)FecesCulture, PCR-DGGETemporal instability in the bacterial population↑ coliform bacteria
↑ aerob:anaerob ratio
Maukonen et al[84] 2006Finland2445 (24–64)567316FecesPCR-DGGE, Transcript analysis with the aid of affinity capture for Clostridial groupsTemporal instability in the bacterial population
IBS-C: ↓ clostridium coccoides-Eubacterium rectale group
Kassinen et al[43] 2007Finland2447.3 (21–65)5810623 (age, gender matching)FecesGC-profiling + high-throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing of 3753 clonesCoverage of the clone libraries of
IBS subtypes and control subjects differed
Kerckhoffs et al[85] 2009The Netherlands4142 ± 2.121211111626Feces, Duodenal mucosaFISH, qPCR↓ bifidobacterium catenulatum
Krogius-Kurikka et al[86] 2009Finland1046.54010022FecesG + C (%G + C) -based profiling and fractioning combined with 16S rRNA gene clone library sequencing of 3267 clones↑ proteobacteria
↑ firmicutes
↓ actinobacteria
↓ bacteroidetes
Lyra et al[87] 2009Finland20IBS-D: 43.6 (26-60), IBS-C: 48.6 (24-64), IBS-M: 50.8 (31-62)688415FecesqPCRIBS-D: ↑ ruminococcus torques, ↓ clostridium thermosuccinogenes
IBS-C: ↑ ruminococcus bromii-like
IBS-M: ↓ ruminococcus torques, ↑ clostridium thermosuccinogenes
Tana et al[88] 2010Japan2621.7 ± 2.013118726 (age, gender matching)FecesCulture, qPCR↑ veillonella spp.
↑ lactobacillus spp.
Codling et al[89] 2010Ireland4743.6 (24–66)0---33Feces, Colonic mucosaPCR-DGGESignificantly more variation in the gut microbiota of healthy volunteers than that of IBS patients
Ponnusamy et al[90] 2011South Korea1147.5 (18-74)6---8FecesDGGE + qPCR of 16S rRNA genes↑ diversity of Bacteroidetes and Lactobacillus groups
Rinttilä et al[91] 2011Finland9647 (20-73)27158123FecesqPCR17% of IBS samples (n = 15) tested positive for staphylococcus aureus
Rajilić-Stojanović et al[45] 2011Finland6249 (22−66)518251942FecesPhylogenetic 16S rRNA microarray and qPCR2-fold ↑ firmicutes:Bacteroidetes ratio↓ bacteroidetes, ↑ dorea, ruminococcus, clostridium sppBifidobacterium faecalibacterium spp
Carroll et al[51] 2011United States1635.6 (23–52)5016021Feces, Colonic biopsiesT-RFLP fingerprinting of 16S rRNA-PCR↓ microbial biodiversity in D-IBS fecal samples
Parkes et al[52] 2012United Kingdom53IBS-D: 36.2 (32.1–40.3), IBS-C: 32.4 (28.1–36.7)282627026Colonic mucosaFISH, confocal microscopyExpansion of mucosa-associated microbiota; mainly bacteroides and clostridia; association with IBS subgroups and symptoms
Jeffery et al[92] 2012Sweden3737 ± 12 1110151220FecesPyrosequencing 16SrRNAClustering of IBS patients: normal-like vs abnormal microbiota composition (increase of firmicutes-associated taxa and a depletion of bacteroidetes-related taxa)
Table 2 Advantages and limitations of the principal techniques used in the characterization of the intestinal microbiota[16,39]
AdvantagesLimitations
CultureCheap, easy to useLimited estimate intestinal microbiota
PCR-T/DGGEHigh sensitivity in detecting difference in bacterial populations, semi-quantitativeDoes not identify bacteria unless bands on the gel are cut out and sequenced
FISHMicrobial in situ identification, high sensitivity, quantitativeFew species can be simultaneously detected, only known species are detected
T-RFLPLow costLow biodiversity resolution, no species-level identification, not quantitative
Quantitative PCRCan detect small number of bacteria and quantify themLaborious
Phylogenetic microarrayHigh biodiversity resolution, quantitativeOnly known species are detected
NGS phylogenetic analysis (e.g., pyrosequencing)Enormous quantities of data at individual Species levelVery costly, need bioinformatics analysis
Table 3 Systemic reviews for randomized controlled trials of probiotics in irritable bowel syndrome
Ref.Selection criterian of identified studiesResults
McFarland et al[73] 2008RCTs in humans published as full articles or meeting abstracts in peer-reviewed journals20 RCTsGlobal IBS symptoms: RR = 0.77 (95%CI: 0.62-0.94)/ abdominal pain: RR = 0.78 (95%CI: 0.69-0.88)
Brenner et al[76] 2009RCTs; adults with IBS defined by Manning or Rome II criteria; single or combination probiotic vs placebo; improvement in IBS symptoms and/or decrease in frequency of adverse events reported16 RCTs → 11 studies showed suboptimal study designBifidobacterium infantis 35624 has shown efficacy for improvement of IBS symptoms. Most RCTs about the utility of probiotics in IBS have not used an appropriate study design
Hoveyda et al[74] 2009RCTs compared the effects of any probiotic therapy with placebo in patients with IBS14 RCTs → 7 RCTs providing outcomes as dichotomous variable and 6 RCTs providing outcomes as continuous variableOverall symptoms: dichtomous data - OR = 0.63 (95%CI: 0.45-0.83)/continuous data - mean ± SD, 0.23 (95%CI: 0.07-0.38) Trials varied in relation to the length of treatment (4-26 wk), dose, organisms and strengths of probiotics used
Moayyedi et al[75] 2010RCTs comparing the effect of probiotics with placebo or no treatment in adult patients with IBS (over the age of 16 yr)19 RCTs → 10 RCTs providing outcomes as a dichotomous variableProbiotics appear to be efficacious in IBS (Probiotics were statistically significantly better than placebo, but there was statistically significant heterogeneity). The magnitude of benefit and the most effective species and strain are uncertain
Ortiz-Lucas et al[77] 2013RCTs comparing probiotics with placebo in treating IBS symptoms24 RCTs → 10 RCTs providing continuous data performed with continuous data summarized using mean ± SD and 95%CIsPain scores: improved by probiotics containing Bifidobacterium breve, Bifidobacterium longum, or Lactobacillus acidophilus species Distension scores: improved by probiotics containing B. breve, B. infantis, Lactobacillus casei, or Lactobacillus plantarum species Flatulence: improved by probiotics containing B. breve, B. infantis, L. casei, L. plantarum, B. longum, L. acidophilus, Lactobacillus bulgaricus, and Streptococcus salivarius ssp. thermophilus