Microorganisms (Sep 2024)

A Controlled, Retrospective, Single-Center Study to Evaluate the Role of a Probiotic Mixture Administered during Pregnancy in Reducing Streptococcus Agalactiae Swab Positivity and the Frequency of Premature Rupture of Amniochorionic Membranes

  • Maurizio Arduini,
  • Elena Laurenti,
  • Massimiliano Cazzaniga,
  • Alexander Bertuccioli,
  • Ilaria Cavecchia,
  • Mariarosaria Matera,
  • Nicola Zerbinati,
  • Francesco Di Pierro

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms12101979
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. 1979

Abstract

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Intrapartum antibiotic prophylaxis, considered able to prevent streptococcal transmission from mother to newborn and its severe negative consequences, leads to microbiota dysbiosis, described as having a negative impact on well-being in both elements of the dyad. Enterococcus faecium L3 is a probiotic strain capable of exerting strong antagonistic activity against most streptococci, including S. agalactiae, due to the production of bacteriocins (known as enterocins A and B). A proprietary probiotic mixture containing the strain L3 demonstrated, in 2016, a significant reduction in episodes of PROM in pregnant women, with a less-than-expected effect on the vaginal–rectal presence of the pathogen S. agalactiae. With the aim of confirming the role exerted by the probiotic mixture in PROM episodes and to better understand the value of its impact on the clinical detection of S. agalactiae, we have retrospectively analyzed the results obtained in 125 L3-treated (over 12 weeks) women versus 125 untreated controls. Despite some limitations, our analysis has confirmed the role exerted by the probiotic in significantly reducing the following: (1) episodes of PROM, (2) vaginal–rectal positivity for S. agalactiae, and (3) the need to administer intrapartum antibiotics for prophylaxis. It likely also suggests operating using a cultural method very specific to S. agalactiae when testing women who were administered an Enterococcus-based probiotic.

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