4.7 Article

Impact of personalized diet and probiotic supplementation on inflammation, nutritional parameters and intestinal microbiota - The RISTOMED project: Randomized controlled trial in healthy older people

Journal

CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 34, Issue 4, Pages 593-602

Publisher

CHURCHILL LIVINGSTONE
DOI: 10.1016/j.clnu.2014.09.023

Keywords

Inflammation; Oxidative stress; Aging; VSL#3; Internet; Nutritional software

Funding

  1. European Union [FP7-SME-2007-1, 222230]

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Objectives: To assess the impact of a personalized diet, with or without addition of VSL#3 preparation, on biomarkers of inflammation, nutrition, oxidative stress and intestinal microbiota in 62 healthy persons aged 65-85 years. Design: Open label, randomized, multicenter study. Primary endpoint: High-sensitivity C-reactive protein. Setting: Community. Interventions: Eight week web-based dietary advice (RISTOMED platform) alone or with supplementation of VSL#3 (2 capsules per day). The RISTOMED diet was optimized to reduce inflammation and oxidative stress. Measurements: Blood and stool samples were collected on days 1 and 56. Results: Diet alone reduced ESR (p = 0.02), plasma levels of cholesterol (p < 0.01) and glucose (p = 0.03). Addition of VSL#3 reduced ESR (p = 0.05) and improved folate (p = 0.007), vitamin B12 (p = 0.001) and homocysteine (p < 0.001) plasma levels. Neither intervention demonstrated any further effects on inflammation. Subgroup analysis showed 40 participants without signs of low-grade inflammation (hsCRP<3 mg/l, subgroup 1) and 21 participants with low-grade inflammation at baseline (hsCRP >= 3 mg/l, subgroup 2). In subgroup 2 addition of VSL#3 increased bifidobacteria (p = 0.005) in more participants and improved both folate (p = 0.015) and vitamin B12 (p = 0.035) levels compared with subgroup 1. The increases were positively correlated to the change in the bifidobacteria concentration for folate (p = 0.023) and vitamin B12 (p = 0.001). As expected change in homocysteine correlated negatively to change in folate (r = -0.629, p = 0.002) and vitamin B12 (r = -0.482, p = 0.026). Conclusions: Addition of VSL#3 increased bifidobacteria and supported adequate folate and vitamin B12 concentrations in subjects with low-grade inflammation. Decrease in homocysteine with VSL#3 was clinically relevant, suggesting protective potentials for aging-associated conditions, e.g. cardiovascular or neurological diseases. (C) 2014 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd and European Society for Clinical Nutrition and Metabolism. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-SA license.

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