Synbiotics Easing Renal Failure by Improving Gut Microbiology (SYNERGY): A Randomized Trial

Megan Rossi, David W Johnson, Mark Morrison, Elaine M Pascoe, Jeff S Coombes, Josephine M Forbes, Cheuk-Chun Szeto, Brett C McWhinney, Jacobus P J Ungerer, Katrina L Campbell, Megan Rossi, David W Johnson, Mark Morrison, Elaine M Pascoe, Jeff S Coombes, Josephine M Forbes, Cheuk-Chun Szeto, Brett C McWhinney, Jacobus P J Ungerer, Katrina L Campbell

Abstract

Background and objectives: The generation of key uremic nephrovascular toxins, indoxyl sulfate (IS), and p-cresyl sulfate (PCS), is attributed to the dysbiotic gut microbiota in CKD. The aim of our study was to evaluate whether synbiotic (pre- and probiotic) therapy alters the gut microbiota and reduces serum concentrations of microbiome-generated uremic toxins, IS and PCS, in patients with CKD.

Design, setting, participants, & measurements: Predialysis adult participants with CKD (eGFR=10-30 ml/min per 1.73 m(2)) were recruited between January 5, 2013 and November 12, 2013 to a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover trial of synbiotic therapy over 6 weeks (4-week washout). The primary outcome was serum IS. Secondary outcomes included serum PCS, stool microbiota profile, eGFR, proteinuria-albuminuria, urinary kidney injury molecule-1, serum inflammatory biomarkers (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-10, and TNF-α), serum oxidative stress biomarkers (F2-isoprostanes and glutathione peroxidase), serum LPS, patient-reported health, Gastrointestinal Symptom Score, and dietary intake. A prespecified subgroup analysis explored the effect of antibiotic use on treatment effect.

Results: Of 37 individuals randomized (age =69±10 years old; 57% men; eGFR=24±8 ml/min per 1.73 m(2)), 31 completed the study. Synbiotic therapy did not significantly reduce serum IS (-2 μmol/L; 95% confidence interval [95% CI], -5 to 1 μmol/L) but did significantly reduce serum PCS (-14 μmol/L; 95% CI, -27 to -2 μmol/L). Decreases in both PCS and IS concentrations were more pronounced in patients who did not receive antibiotics during the study (n=21; serum PCS, -25 μmol/L; 95% CI, -38 to -12 μmol/L; serum IS, -5 μmol/L; 95% CI, -8 to -1 μmol/L). Synbiotics also altered the stool microbiome, particularly with enrichment of Bifidobacterium and depletion of Ruminococcaceae. Except for an increase in albuminuria of 38 mg/24 h (P=0.03) in the synbiotic arm, no changes were observed in the other secondary outcomes.

Conclusion: In patients with CKD, synbiotics did not significantly reduce serum IS but did decrease serum PCS and favorably modified the stool microbiome. Large-scale clinical trials are justified.

Keywords: chronic kidney disease; glomerular filtration rate; humans; indoxyl sulphate; microbiota; p-cresyl sulphate; probiotics; renal insufficiency, chronic; synbiotics; uremic toxins.

Copyright © 2016 by the American Society of Nephrology.

Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
The Synbiotics Easing Renal Failure by Improving Gut Microbiology (SYNERGY) Study schema.
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Summary of patient flow through in the Synbiotics Easing Renal Failure by Improving Gut Microbiology (SYNERGY) Study.
Figure 3.
Figure 3.
Treatment effect of synbiotics on serum uremic toxins in all completing patients (n=31) and patients who were antibiotic free (n=21).aTreatment effect (95% confidence interval) derived from regression modeling accounting for period effect. *P=0.03; **P=0.001.

Source: PubMed

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