Current Medical Mycology (Sep 2021)

Vaginal and oral use of probiotics as adjunctive therapy to fluconazole in patients with vulvovaginal candidiasis: A clinical trial on Iranian women

  • Zahra Vahedpoor,
  • Mahdi Abastabar,
  • Mojtaba Sehat,
  • Parisa Talebian,
  • Tayebeh Felfelian fini,
  • Zahra Dastanpour,
  • Iman Haghani,
  • Ramtin Chelongarian,
  • Mehdi Nazeri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.18502/cmm.7.3.7803
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 3
pp. 36 – 43

Abstract

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Background and Purpose: Vulvovaginal candidiasis is considered the second mostprevalent gynecologic infection among women and one of the main reasons for referring to a gynecologist. During recent decades, probiotic usage has been defined as one of the therapeutic regimens for vaginal candidiasis management, but these findings were controversial. The current study was conducted to determine the effect of fluconazole plus vaginal and oral probiotics supplementation on clinical and mycological improvement of vaginal candidiasis concomitant with antifungal susceptibility of Candida species to fluconazole.Materials and Methods: This double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial wasconducted on 76 women with vaginal candidiasis admitted to Naghavi and Imam RezaGynecology Clinics in Kashan, Central Iran, from July 2017 to March 2020. Patientswere diagnosed according to vaginal candidiasis symptoms and positive culture forCandida species. The patients were divided into two groups; one of them receivedfluconazole plus vaginal and oral probiotics, while the other one received fluconazolewith placebo. The clinical and mycological findings were recorded before and after thetreatment. In vitro, the fluconazole susceptibility test was determined by themicrodilution method according to the Clinical and Laboratory Standards Institute (M27-A3) for the baseline Candida isolates.Results: Based on the findings, 35 days after the intervention, a significant reductionwas reported in vaginal candidiasis symptoms in the probiotics supplementation group.Although probiotics supplementation therapy was a better mycological cure, comparedto the fluconazole with the placebo group, this difference was not significant (68.4% vs.46.9%, P=0.184). Exclusion of resistant and susceptible dose-dependent strain in theregression model demonstrated a significant reduction in positive culture probiotics inthe supplementation group.Conclusion: Oral and vaginal supplementation with probiotics for 4 weeks played asignificant role in the elimination of vaginal candidiasis symptoms. Adjustment ofclinical and mycological responses with drug resistance patterns of patients could open a promising horizon for probiotics consumption as a complementary treatment.

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