This randomized controlled trial investigated the effects of adding probiotic supplementation to standard phototherapy in 79 jaundiced neonates. Participants received either phototherapy alone or phototherapy combined with M-16V, Bb-12, or a combination of both strains administered until 30 days post-discharge. Neurodevelopment was assessed using Griffith Development Scales at 1.5 to 2 years of age.
Results indicated that the probiotic groups experienced a significantly increased daily defecation frequency and an accelerated reduction rate of transcutaneous bilirubin compared to the control group. Additionally, hospital stay length was shortened in the intervention groups. Regarding gut microbiota, significant differences in beta diversity were observed between control and probiotic groups. Specifically, the abundance of Bifidobacterium breve increased with M-16V and combined supplementation. Metabolite levels, including 5-methyltetrahydrofolate and indoleacetic acid, were elevated with combined supplementation.
In terms of neurodevelopment, Bb-12 supplementation improved Griffith scores in personal-social and performance domains. No adverse events, serious adverse events, discontinuations, or issues regarding tolerability were reported in the study. The authors suggest these findings provide a safer and more effective treatment approach for neonatal jaundice.
Key limitations include the lack of reported effect sizes, absolute numbers, or statistical measures such as p-values and confidence intervals. While the study design supports a causal interpretation, the results are presented as associations or improvements without specific quantitative rigor. Further research with detailed statistical reporting is needed to confirm these benefits.
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BackgroundHyperbilirubinemia is among the most common conditions in neonates, and phototherapy is currently the most widely used treatment. However, it can induce side effects such as skin rashes, diarrhea, and gut microbiota dysbiosis, particularly affecting Bifidobacterium levels. This study aimed to investigate whether the supplementation of Bifidobacterium can alleviate dysbiosis and improve clinical outcomes in jaundiced neonates.MethodsA total of 79 jaundiced neonates were enrolled and divided into four groups: Phototherapy Control, M-16V, Bb-12, and the combined M-16V+Bb-12 group. Probiotics were administered until 30 days post-discharge, and neurodevelopment was assessed at 1.5–2 years using the Griffith Development Scales. Fecal samples collected before, during, and after treatment were analyzed using metagenomic sequencing and non-targeted metabolomics.ResultsProbiotic supplementation significantly increased daily defecation frequency, accelerated the reduction rate of transcutaneous bilirubin, and shortened hospital stays. Griffith scores indicated that Bb-12 supplementation improved scores in personal-social and performance domains. Metagenomic analysis revealed significant differences in beta diversity between the control and probiotic groups; specifically, M-16V and combined supplementation increased the abundance of Bifidobacterium breve. Pathway enrichment analysis showed up-regulation of pyrimidine-containing compound metabolic processes, intramolecular transferase activity, and DNA conformation change. Metabolomics further demonstrated that combined supplementation elevated levels of 5-methyltetrahydrofolate (linked to DNA synthesis), benzoic acid and indoleacetic acid (linked to growth and development), and the anti-inflammatory metabolite indole-3-lactic acid.DiscussionFor neonates receiving phototherapy, the addition of M-16 V + Bb-12 probiotics can improve the diversity of microflora, reduce the fixed value of harmful bacteria in the intestine, and enhance the excretion of bilirubin from the intestine, to improve the inflammatory damage and microbiota disorder caused by phototherapy, and achieve the effect of clinically improving jaundice, reducing bilirubin, shortening the length of hospitalization, and promoting neurodevelopment. It provides a safer and more effective treatment for neonatal jaundice.