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Clinical Trial Summary

Targeting human microbiota, in particular those of the gastrointestinal tract, by means of prebiotics, probiotics, symbiotics or antibiotics has gained interest for its potential in the management of human health. Oral bacterial communities have been extensively studied over the last decade both in normal and pathological states; however, little data are available on the possibility to modify microbiota composition in a controlled and 'non-aggressive' manner by using probiotics, in order to improve oral health. Saliva contains microorganisms attached to exfoliated human cells and released from oral biofilms; its microbiota is most similar (proportionally) to those of the dorsal and lateral tongue. In addition, bacteria belonging to genera Porphyromonas, Tannerella and Treponema, which contain species associated with periodontitis, are consistently identified in saliva. Salivary microbial communities are relatively stable and thus potentially interesting as an indicator of oral and general health. Indeed, it has been suggested that interventions aimed at improving oral health should target mucosal microbiota (to which saliva is most similar) in addition to dental microbial communities. Whole saliva also constitutes an alternative to gingival crevicular fluid when analysing analytes present in periodontal pockets. It has been suggested that saliva reflects a consensus inflammatory status of the whole mouth with potentially significant clinical relevance. Strain K12 of Streptococcus salivarius is available internationally as a food supplement, notably for oral hygiene. Several studies investigated the effectiveness of S. salivarius as a probiotic in the context of pharyngeal infections, halitosis, plaque formation and caries. Our study will focus on the effects of supplementation with this commercially available oral probiotic on the resident microbiota and inflammatory markers in order to identify signatures associated with resistance/susceptibility to colonization by probiotic strains.


Clinical Trial Description

OBJECTIVES This is a monocentric, prospective, cross-over, randomized, double-blinded study in which all participants will receive placebo and active probiotic treatment, 15 of which will first be treated with placebo and then will be given probiotics. The other 15 participants will first get probiotics and then, after a 3-week wash out period, the placebo. The main objective of the study is to assess changes in salivary microbiota profiles and inflammatory markers following S. salivarius probiotic treatment. Our secondary objective is to identify correlations between specific salivary microbial taxa (subspecies to phylum levels) and inflammatory markers. Clinical outcome is not the focus of this study, although basic information about the oral health will be measured. METHODOLOGY BIOTICS-O (Burgerstein) probiotic that will be used is a commercial food supplement available over the counter in the pharmacy as blister packs of 30 lozenges containing 10^9 CFU of S. salivarius K12. Participants will let melt the lozenge after tooth brushing in the evening. Placebo lozenges (inactivated probiotic) will have the same look, taste and smell as the active treatment lozenges, and they will be administered in the same way as the active treatment lozenges. Metagenomic analysis of the microbiota: Indexed paired-end metagenomic libraries will be prepared using DNA extracted from saliva and sequenced for 2x150 cycles on an Illumina NovaSeq 6000 instrument to generate 5-10 million read pairs per sample. Our standard metagenomic analysis pipeline (HUGE-MAP) will be used; it includes: (i) read quality filtering; (ii) removal of replicate sequences; (iii) removal of read pairs that match human genome sequence and, (iv) classification of read pairs with CLARK against the collection of NCBI reference and representative bacterial, archaeal and fungal genomes, as well as Latest RefSeq NCBI genomes of prophages and DNA virus families whose members may infect humans. Functional assignments i.e. profiling the presence/absence and abundance of microbial gene families and pathways will be performed using MG-RAST server. Bacterial abundance will be measured by qPCR and/or relative to the number of reads obtained from the spiked calibrator. Cytokine measurements: Salivary cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha) analysis will be performed using a Salimetrcs Core Cytokine Panel - 4-plex. OBJECTIVES This is a monocentric, prospective, cross-over, randomized, double-blinded study in which all participants will receive placebo and active probiotic treatment, 15 of which will first be treated with placebo and then will be given probiotics. The other 15 participants will first get probiotics and then, after a 3-week wash out period, the placebo. The main objective of the study is to assess changes in salivary microbiota profiles and inflammatory markers following S. salivarius probiotic treatment. Our secondary objective is to identify correlations between specific salivary microbial taxa (subspecies to phylum levels) and inflammatory markers. Clinical outcome is not the focus of this study, although basic information about the oral health will be measured. METHODOLOGY BIOTICS-O (Burgerstein) probiotic that will be used is a commercial food supplement available over the counter in the pharmacy as blister packs of 30 lozenges containing 10^9 CFU of S. salivarius K12. Participants will let melt the lozenge after tooth brushing in the evening. Placebo lozenges (inactivated probiotic) will have the same look, taste and smell as the active treatment lozenges, and they will be administered in the same way as the active treatment lozenges. Metagenomic analysis of the microbiota: Indexed paired-end metagenomic libraries will be prepared using DNA extracted from saliva and sequenced for 2x150 cycles on an Illumina NovaSeq 6000 instrument to generate 5-10 million read pairs per sample. Our standard metagenomic analysis pipeline (HUGE-MAP) will be used; it includes: (i) read quality filtering; (ii) removal of replicate sequences; (iii) removal of read pairs that match human genome sequence and, (iv) classification of read pairs with CLARK against the collection of NCBI reference and representative bacterial, archaeal and fungal genomes, as well as Latest RefSeq NCBI genomes of prophages and DNA virus families whose members may infect humans. Functional assignments i.e. profiling the presence/absence and abundance of microbial gene families and pathways will be performed using MG-RAST server. Bacterial abundance will be measured by qPCR and/or relative to the number of reads obtained from the spiked calibrator. Cytokine measurements: Salivary cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6, IL-8, TNF-alpha) analysis will be performed using a Salimetrix Core Cytokine Panel - 4-plex.. Samplings will be performed at weeks 1, 4, 7, 10, 13, 16 and 19. ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT04891523
Study type Interventional
Source University Hospital, Geneva
Contact
Status Completed
Phase N/A
Start date November 1, 2021
Completion date October 24, 2022

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