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Adjunctive probiotic therapy sustains symptom relief in gastroesophageal reflux disease through gut microbiome-metabolome remodeling.

  • 2026-02-17
  • mSystems 11(2)
    • Yingmeng Li
    • Qiong Li
    • Keyu Quan
    • Yong Xie
    • Ni Yang
    • Teng Ma
    • Longjin Zheng
    • Wei Zhou
    • Yalin Li
    • Hao Jin
    • Zhihong Sun
    • Yongfu Chen
    • Lai-Yu Kwok
    • Nonghua Lu
    • Weifeng Zhu
    • Wenjun Liu
    • Heping Zhang
Proton pump inhibitors (PPIs) are standard therapy for gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), but long-term use causes dysbiosis, gastrointestinal side effects, and symptom relapse after discontinuation. Probiotics may offer adjunctive benefits by modulating the gut ecosystem. The study aimed to evaluate the efficacy of a multi-strain probiotic (Lihuo) with rabeprazole in GERD and its impact on gut microbiota and metabolome. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial was conducted in 120 GERD patients assigned to receive rabeprazole with either Lihuo (n = 64) or placebo (n = 56) for 8 weeks, followed by 4 weeks of probiotic or placebo alone. The primary outcome was change in the Reflux Disease Questionnaire (RDQ) score. Secondary outcomes included Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Scale, endoscopic healing, and multi-omics profiling (shotgun metagenomics, phageome, and untargeted/targeted metabolomics). Compared with the placebo group, the probiotic group exhibited a pronounced 36.51% reduction in RDQ scores after 12 weeks of intervention (P = 0.017), alongside a higher numerical endoscopic healing rate (36.84% vs 12.50%; P = 0.365). Metagenomics revealed enrichment of Bifidobacterium animalis, Lactiplantibacillus plantarum, and Clostridium sp900540255, with reductions in Bacteroides uniformis and Clostridium Q fessum. Metabolomics showed increased γ-aminobutyric acid, succinate, citrulline, and short-chain fatty acids levels, with interesting microbe-metabolite correlations such as Bifidobacterium animalis-γ-aminobutyric acid and Bacteroides fragilis-succinate (r ≥ 0.30, P < 0.01). Our findings support that adjunctive probiotic therapy sustains post-PPI symptom relief, associated with targeted modulation of gut microbiota and bioactive metabolites.IMPORTANCELong-term proton pump inhibitor use in gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) may disrupt gut microbiota and cause symptom relapse after discontinuation. We found that adjunctive probiotic therapy sustained reflux reduction post-proton pump inhibitor. Probiotic use enriched beneficial taxa (Bifidobacterium and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum) and increased γ-aminobutyric acid, succinate, citrulline, and short-chain fatty acids. Strong correlations linked microbial shifts to metabolic and clinical improvements. This study demonstrates that adjunctive probiotic therapy enhances symptom control and supports microbial-metabolic homeostasis in GERD.CLINICAL TRIALSThis study is registered with the Chinese Clinial Trial Registry as ChiCTR2000038409.

Research Insights

SupplementHealth OutcomeEffect TypeEffect Size
Bifidobacterium plantarumImproved Endoscopic Healing in GERDBeneficial
Small
Bifidobacterium plantarumImproved Gastroesophageal Reflux SymptomsBeneficial
Moderate
Bifidobacterium plantarumImproved Gastrointestinal SymptomsBeneficial
Small
Bifidobacterium plantarumImproved Gut Microbiome CompositionBeneficial
Moderate
Bifidobacterium plantarumIncreased Beneficial Gut Microbiota AbundanceBeneficial
Moderate
Bifidobacterium plantarumIncreased Levels of Beneficial MetabolitesBeneficial
Moderate
Bifidobacterium plantarumIncreased Production of Bioactive MetabolitesBeneficial
Moderate
Bifidobacterium plantarumReduced Reflux SymptomsBeneficial
Moderate
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