Pregnancy Clinical Trial
Official title:
Effects of Probiotic Use During Pregnancy on Lactobacillus and Group B Streptococcus Vaginal Colonization: A Pilot Study
This pilot quasi experiment was designed to determine the feasibility of a randomized controlled trial of the oral probiotic combination of Florajen3 (>7.5 x109 L. acidophilus, >6.0 x109. B. lactis, and >1.5 x109 B. longum) taken orally once daily beginning at 28 weeks gestation, against placebo, to reduce the colonization of group B Streptococcus at 36 weeks.
Methods
A non-blinded, open-label, quasi-experimental design was approved by the Institutional
Review Boards of three institutions (two universities and the clinical research site). The
study setting was a large Certified Nurse-Midwife (subsequently referred to as midwife)
clinical practice serving a culturally and economically diverse urban population in the
Midwest region of the USA.
Participants Women self-selected to participate in screening and informed consent procedures
done by the first two authors. The following inclusion criteria were used at study
enrollment: low risk (no obstetric, fetal, medical or genetic risk factors), adult (≥18
years of age), pregnant at 28 ± 2 weeks gestation, able to speak and write English, and
expressing willingness to participate in the study intervention (oral probiotic) and data
collection (vaginal and rectal swabs, questionnaires).
A convenience sample of 20 healthy pregnant participants was sought. Following informed
consent, the first 10 subjects were assigned to the experimental group. Nonrandom assignment
was used to assure that the 10 experimental group participants were enrolled while remaining
within funding, and time constraints. After enrolling the experimental group, the next ten
women were assigned to the control group.
Intervention
The study intervention consisted of one capsule of Florajen3 (previously described) orally
each day. Florajen3 meets the internationally established probiotic criteria (FAO/WHO,
2001). The probiotics contained in Florajen3 are non-spore-forming, lactose- and
hydrogen-peroxide-producing bacteria. The manufacturer recommends refrigeration to maintain
maximum potency. As part of the preparation for this study, a sample of Florajen3 was left
unrefrigerated for a period of 6 weeks and appropriate colony counts were sustained.
Therefore for the purpose of the study, the participants in the experimental group were
allowed to leave the probiotic unrefrigerated in an effort to improve daily compliance.
Experimental group study participants were made aware of the probiotic brand used (open
label) as the intervention.
Further, the current state of knowledge about prenatal probiotics, including potentially
rare side effects, were discussed at length using a 10-page informed consent document. The
Florajen3 was placed in a study bottle equipped with an electronic cap monitoring system
(MEMS ®AARDEX), designed to record each time the bottle was opened by the participant. Each
opening of the cap bottle equipped with this system is recorded on a microchip. The number
of openings are retrievable via computer software when the bottle caps are returned.
Researchers, midwives, and participants were aware of group assignment. The control group
participants did not receive a placebo.
Procedures
Midwife prenatal care providers and staff were oriented to the study data collection
procedures. Study data were collected at three points during routine prenatal visits with
each participant's midwife (28±2 weeks, 32±2 weeks, and 36±2 weeks gestation). The study was
considered completed at the 36±2 weeks gestation visit. All participants received
compensation at the completion of 2 study visits; 25 USD at 32±2 weeks and 75 USD at 36±2
weeks gestation. Probiotic group participants were offered a supply of probiotics for the
remainder of pregnancy.
The midwife prenatal provider collected demographic information (birth date, race, and
gestational age), and the vaginal and rectal swabs for GBS and wet mount, using accepted
criteria to identify the vaginal pH and the presence of normal flora and/or pathogens. The
wet mounts were examined microscopically by each midwife using standardized wet mount
diagnostic procedures with normal saline and potassium hydroxide and documented in a
standard format. Participants completed a brief questionnaire at each study visit that asked
them to describe yogurt ingestion, sexual activity (frequency and type), and vaginal
cleansing practices (if used) in the past week; these were considered potential confounding
variables. The participants were also asked if these practices were typical for them, and if
not, how they were atypical. Women in the experimental group were asked to report any side
effects that they attributed to the probiotics by notifying their midwife immediately, if
necessary, and then also noting the information on the study questionnaire. As part of
routine prenatal care, the CDC-required GBS vaginal to rectal swab was collected by each
participant's midwife and sent to the hospital laboratory between the 35 and 37 week visit.
This was the only result that determined the need for IAP.
Researchers oversaw data collection and sample packaging. Participants were asked to return
their probiotic bottles at each study visit and the Florajen3 capsules were replaced with a
fresh supply. This gave the researchers the opportunity to notify the laboratory to record
the date for later evaluation of the electronic cap monitoring results and conduct pill
counts as an additional means to monitor women's responses to study participation, as well
as probiotic adherence at each study visit. The vaginal and rectal swabs were placed on ice,
packaged according to accepted procedures for human specimen handling, and shipped overnight
to the laboratory of the final author, located 80 miles from the study site, for processing
and analysis.
Laboratory Analysis Upon receipt at the laboratory, the vaginal and rectal swabs were
processed for quantitative colony counts of GBS. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was
performed to determine whether bacteria isolated were the same as those in Florajen3. If
positive for PCR, pulsed field gel electrophoresis (PFGE) would be performed to confirm the
strain identity.
These results were for research purposes only and were not available to the practicing
midwives.
The routine CDC-recommended prenatal GBS vaginal to rectal swabs were analyzed at the
hospital laboratory, using a culture based method in which a threshold for GBS positive
results is considered greater than 102 colony forming units (CFU) per swab. These results
determined the need for IAP and were available to the midwives for management during labor.
Statistical Analysis
Demographics, the study variables, and laboratory data were entered into and analyzed with a
statistical software package. Descriptive statistics, Confidence Intervals, Chi-squares,
T-tests, and correlations were used for analysis. Data were compared between subjects at
each study visit and between groups at each data collection point. The qualitative prenatal
GBS culture results (positive or negative) from the hospital laboratory were compared to the
quantitative vaginal and rectal GBS study results, adherence data, and confounding variables
(yogurt ingestion, sexual activity, and vaginal cleansing practices).
;
Allocation: Non-Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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