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
- PubMed: 41609355
- DOI: 10.1128/msystems.01568-25
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
| Supplement | Health Outcome | Effect Type | Effect Size |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Improved Endoscopic Healing in GERD | Beneficial | Small |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Improved Gastroesophageal Reflux Symptoms | Beneficial | Moderate |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Improved Gastrointestinal Symptoms | Beneficial | Small |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Improved Gut Microbiome Composition | Beneficial | Moderate |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Increased Beneficial Gut Microbiota Abundance | Beneficial | Moderate |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Increased Levels of Beneficial Metabolites | Beneficial | Moderate |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Increased Production of Bioactive Metabolites | Beneficial | Moderate |
| Bifidobacterium plantarum | Reduced Reflux Symptoms | Beneficial | Moderate |