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PROBIOTICS FOR CHRONIC LOW BACK PAIN WITH TYPE 1 MODIC CHANGES: A RANDOMIZED DOUBLE-BLIND, PLACEBO-CONTROLLED TRIAL WITH ONE-YEAR FOLLOW-UP USING LACTOBACILLUS RHAMNOSIS GG

The Society for Back Pain Research (SBPR) Annual General Meeting 2019, ‘From Bench to Bedside’. Sheffield, England, 5–6 September 2019.



Abstract

Background and purpose

Modic changes (MC) are a risk factor for development of chronic low back pain (CLBP). There is no agreement about the cause of inflammation in MC, but autoimmunity has been suggested. The aim of the study was to investigate whether treatment with lactic acid bacteria for 100 days was associated with change of disability and pain, via a change in the gut microbiota inducing a change in the immune system, in patients with CLBP and type 1 MC during one year follow-up.

Methods

Eighty-nine patients with CLBP and type 1 MC were randomized to receive either one capsule Lactobacillus Rhamnosis GG or placebo capsules twice daily for 100 days.

Results

Missing values at one year were 4% and 3% in the disability and pain variables, respectively. The predefined outcomes disability and back and leg pain only changed little during follow-up with no statistically significant differences between groups. At one year, back pain had decreased by 1.1 more on a 0–10 scale (95% CI 0.20- 1.97) in the experimental group than in the control group. There were no differences regarding other predefined outcomes, i.e. global effect or percentage with minimal disability at one year. Nine percent of the patients reported gastrointestinal side-effects without difference between groups.

Conclusions

No differences were found between groups regarding the predefined outcomes. Overall, the study confirmed that CLBP with MC1 is a grave back pain disorder, with little tendency to improvement. During follow-up, disability of the whole cohort was reduced by just 17%.

Conflicts of interest: No conflicts of interest

Sources of funding: The study has been supported by The Danish Rheumatism Association and Peter and Helga Kornings Fond.


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