Effective probiotic regimens for bacterial vaginosis treatment and recurrence prevention: A systematic review.
- 2025-03-10
- Narra J 5(1)
- Udjianto Udjianto
- Noorhamdani A Sirat
- Bambang Rahardjo
- Lilik Zuhriyah
- PubMed: 40352249
- DOI: 10.52225/narra.v5i1.1671
Study Design
- Type
- Systematic Review
- Population
- 16 RCTs on probiotic treatment for bacterial vaginosis
- Methods
- A systematic search was conducted on December 20, 2024, in Scopus, Web of Science, and PubMed using the keywords "vaginosis," "bacterial vaginosis," and "probiotic"; data were extracted and synthesized, study quality was assessed using the Risk of Bias 2 tool, and NVivo 14 software facilitated thematic analysis
Research Insights
Alternative strains, including L. crispatus, L. plantarum, and L. acidophilus, showed therapeutic potential at doses of 1×10^8 to 5.4 × 10^9 CFU/day for treatment durations ranging from 6 days to 4 months.
- Effect
- Beneficial
- Effect size
- Small
The findings revealed that Lactobacillus rhamnosus TOM 22.8 (10×10^9 CFU/day for 10 days) was the most effective strain and dose, significantly improving Nugent scores, vaginal pH, and microbiota composition and reducing bacterial vaginosis recurrence rate.
- Effect
- Beneficial
- Effect size
- Moderate
The findings revealed that Lactobacillus rhamnosus TOM 22.8 (10×10^9 CFU/day for 10 days) was the most effective strain and dose, significantly improving Nugent scores, vaginal pH, and microbiota composition and reducing bacterial vaginosis recurrence rate.
- Effect
- Beneficial
- Effect size
- Moderate
The findings revealed that Lactobacillus rhamnosus TOM 22.8 (10×10^9 CFU/day for 10 days) was the most effective strain and dose, significantly improving Nugent scores, vaginal pH, and microbiota composition and reducing bacterial vaginosis recurrence rate.
- Effect
- Beneficial
- Effect size
- Moderate