Background: Home Enteral Nutrition (HEN) patients, often older adults, are susceptible to gut microbiota dysbiosis and low-grade chronic inflammation (inflammaging), which negatively impacts overall health and intestinal integrity. However, evidence on microbiota-targeted interventions in this population remains limited. The development of targeted nutritional strategies, such as probiotic supplementation, has been proposed to address these age-related changes. Methods: This exploratory randomized, open-label study explored changes in gut microbiota composition following a 30-day probiotic intervention in a cohort of sixteen older HEN patients. Gut microbiota profiles were analyzed at baseline and post-intervention using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Results: Significant shifts in the gut microbiota were observed, including a statistically significant increase in alpha diversity after 30 days. At the taxonomic level, the treated group showed an increased relative abundance of Lachnospiraceae and Erysipelotrichaceae, suggesting a modulation of gut microbiota structure following probiotic supplementation. Conclusions: These findings provide preliminary insights into microbiota dynamics in this population and may inform the design of future studies integrating functional and clinical outcomes.

Gut Microbiota Changes Following Short-Term Probiotic Supplementation in Older Home Enteral Nutrition Patients / Tombolesi, Niki; Francini, Emanuele; Matacchione, Giulia; Sparvoli, Debora; Peladic, Nikolina Jukic; Cardelli, Maurizio; Recchioni, Rina; Sbriscia, Matilde; Fantone, Sonia; Giordani, Chiara; Giuliani, Angelica; Silvi, Stefania; Fiorini, Dennis; Zeppa, Sabrina Donati; Procopio, Antonio Domenico; Olivieri, Fabiola; Lattanzio, Fabrizia; Capalbo, Maria; Orlandoni, Paolo; Marchegiani, Francesca. - In: NUTRIENTS. - ISSN 2072-6643. - 18:6(2026). [10.3390/nu18061013]

Gut Microbiota Changes Following Short-Term Probiotic Supplementation in Older Home Enteral Nutrition Patients

Tombolesi, Niki;Giuliani, Angelica;Procopio, Antonio Domenico;Olivieri, Fabiola
;
2026-01-01

Abstract

Background: Home Enteral Nutrition (HEN) patients, often older adults, are susceptible to gut microbiota dysbiosis and low-grade chronic inflammation (inflammaging), which negatively impacts overall health and intestinal integrity. However, evidence on microbiota-targeted interventions in this population remains limited. The development of targeted nutritional strategies, such as probiotic supplementation, has been proposed to address these age-related changes. Methods: This exploratory randomized, open-label study explored changes in gut microbiota composition following a 30-day probiotic intervention in a cohort of sixteen older HEN patients. Gut microbiota profiles were analyzed at baseline and post-intervention using 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. Results: Significant shifts in the gut microbiota were observed, including a statistically significant increase in alpha diversity after 30 days. At the taxonomic level, the treated group showed an increased relative abundance of Lachnospiraceae and Erysipelotrichaceae, suggesting a modulation of gut microbiota structure following probiotic supplementation. Conclusions: These findings provide preliminary insights into microbiota dynamics in this population and may inform the design of future studies integrating functional and clinical outcomes.
2026
dysbiosis; gut microbiota; home enteral nutrition (HEN); inflammation; older patients; probiotics
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11566/355072
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