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4th Edition of International Conference on Probiotics and Prebiotics

March 26-28, 2026

March 26 -28, 2026 | Singapore
PROBIOTICS 2026

Results from a cross-sectional observational study examining irritable bowel syndrome patients six months after finishing their participation in the ViIBS trial

Speaker at Probiotics and Prebiotics 2026 - Jacek Piatek
Calisia University, Poland
Title : Results from a cross-sectional observational study examining irritable bowel syndrome patients six months after finishing their participation in the ViIBS trial

Abstract:

A recent clinical (ViIBS) trial investigating the effects of a balanced multi-strain synbiotic in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) patients showed that twelve weeks of treatment resulted in significant improvements across all major IBS symptoms. The current observational study pursued three aims: to investigate patients’ attitudes towards the intake of pro- or synbiotics during the six months after finishing their trial participation, to determine the severity of IBS symptoms, and to assess IBS diagnosis scores. During a single six-month follow-up examination, patients were asked about the intake of probiotics or synbiotics. For the study, former placebo-group patients who abstained from taking probiotics were compared with synbiotic-group patients who continued taking the tested synbiotic. IBS symptom severity was assessed with the IBS—Severity of Symptoms Scale and the IBS diagnosis score with the IBS questionnaire of the World Gastroenterology Organisation. The control group comprised 17 patients (out of 70 from the placebo group participating in the follow-up) and the treatment group 75 (out of 91 examined). IBS symptom severity was significantly lower in the treatment group (23.5 ± 33.1) than in the placebo group (232.6 ± 35.1). IBS diagnosis scores were 5.9 ± 2.5 and 21.2 ± 2.0 in the treatment and control group, respectively. Measurement values for the treatment group indicate the absence of IBS. The results indicate that the prolonged administration of the balanced multi-strain synbiotic can potentially reduce IBS symptom severity and IBS diagnosis scores to levels indicating the absence of IBS, an observation to be followed up in a controlled clinical trial.

Biography:

Prof. Jacek Piatek studied at the Faculty of Medicine at the Medical University of Poznan, Poland. He worked from 1985 until 2018 at the Department of Physiology, University of Medical Sciences in Poznan, Poland. From 2011 to 2013, he was a visiting professor at the Institute of Rural Medicine in Lublin, Poland. Since 2018, he has been a professor at the Calisia University, Kalisz, Poland, where he was the Dean of the Faculty of Health Sciences for a year. He is now heading the Internal Disease Department of the University. His research is focused on the gut microbiota, probiotics, and synbiotics. He is the author of more than 50 peer-reviewed research publications and of two scientific books.

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