Probiotic supplementation during pregnancy or infancy for the prevention of asthma and wheeze: systematic review and meta-analysis

The BMJ
Dec 2013
Citations:5
Influential Citations:0
Systematic Reviews / Meta-Analyses
81
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Methods
Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials enrolling pregnant women or healthy infants under 1 year; 20 trials with 4,866 infants; trials conducted mainly in Europe with some in Australia, New Zealand, and Taiwan; populations included high-risk and unselected groups; follow-up ranged from 4 months to 8 years (median final assessment ~24 months).
Intervention
Perinatal probiotic regimens administered to mothers during pregnancy or to infants during the first year of life. Daily dose 10^8–10^11 CFU. Duration 1–25 months (median 6.3). Administered orally via capsules, oil droplets, or suspensions in water, milk, or infant formula. Some regimens used combinations of multiple probiotic species and included prebiotics in combination.
Results
Probiotic supplementation during the perinatal period did not reduce doctor-diagnosed asthma or childhood wheeze. Asthma RR 0.99 (95% CI 0.81–1.21); wheeze RR 0.97 (95% CI 0.87–1.09). No evidence of protective effect; probiotics cannot be recommended for primary prevention of asthma or wheeze. Data suggest possible increases in lower respiratory tract infections, though findings are not conclusive. Extended follow-up and further research are needed to define the role and safety of perinatal probiotics in asthma prevention.
Limitations
Heterogeneous probiotic strains/formulations, doses, and regimens; follow-up durations varied; most trials not powered for asthma as a primary outcome; many studies at risk of bias due to attrition or unblinding; industry sponsorship common; safety outcomes inconsistently reported; limited long-term data beyond early childhood.

Abstract

Objective To evaluate the association of probiotic supplementation during pregnancy or infancy with childhood asthma and wheeze. Design Systematic review and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Data sources Medline, Embase, and Central (Co...