Country for PR: United States
Contributor: PR Newswire New York
Thursday, March 14 2019 - 08:00
AsiaNet
Scientists clarify what probiotics are and what they are not
LOS ANGELES, March 14, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

     - A new scientific paper calls for strict adherence to the scientific 
definition, ensuring improper use of the term doesn't mislead consumers or 
limit advancements in the emerging field of microbiome science. 

     - Authored by Dr. Gregor Reid, Raja Dhir, and Dr. Azza A. Gadir

Today, Dr. Gregor Reid, the scientist who chaired the United Nations/World 
Health Organization Expert Panel that authored the definition of 'probiotics' 
in 2001[1], published a new paper in Frontiers in Microbiology: "Probiotics: 
Reiterating What They Are and What They Are Not", [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2400860-1&h=174695015&u=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.frontiersin.org%2Farticles%2F10.3389%2Ffmicb.2019.00424%2Ffull&a=%22Probiotics%3A+Reiterating+What+They+Are+and+What+They+Are+Not%22%2C 
] to reestablish and clarify the term. 

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/834476/Seed_Frontier_cover.jpg

Marketing and media misuse of the term 'probiotics', and even misunderstanding 
within the scientific community, has contributed to growing global skepticism 
about the legitimacy of microbial therapies and the associated probiotic 
applications to improve human health. 

Reid authored this paper in an effort to ensure hype doesn't limit scientific 
and medical advancements. "Too many microbiome studies oversell limited 
findings or make broad generalizations that attribute the results of a single 
study on a single product across our entire field. Adherence by scientists, 
publications, and reporters to precise definitions and guidelines will ensure 
more accurate communications," said Reid. "Stewardship of the term 'probiotic' 
is critical to curb its misuse and misattribution and to protect the future of 
a field that has incredible promise."

Summary of Paper

Within the field of microbiome science, the rate of discovery of novel 
organisms with potentially therapeutic benefit is progressing rapidly and 
gaining prominence. More than ever, it is imperative that guidelines are 
followed to determine the validity of a probiotic. As indicated in the original 
FAO/WHO (2002) report[1], there are certain expectations required to call an 
organism 'probiotic'. These have been further clarified in 2014[2], and must 
include:

    - That microbes be alive in an adequate number when administered. 
    - Strains must be identified genetically, classified using the latest
      terminology, and designated by numbers, letters, or names. 
    - Appropriately sized and designed studies must be performed to designate a
      strain as probiotic and use the strain(s) on the host to which the
      probiotics are intended (human, livestock, companion animal, etc). 
    - Strains shown to confer a benefit for one condition may not be probiotic
      for another application. 
    - Strains that are probiotic for humans but are being used in animal
      studies should be clearly designated as human probiotics under
      experimental testing.

For the complete paper, visit 
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2019.00424/full 

As part of the authors' commitment to further transparency and accountability 
in science communication, they have included their conflict of interest 
statement below. They encourage the scientific community to do the same on 
press releases. 

Raja Dhir is a Co-Founder of Seed Health, Inc., a biotechnology company 
developing microbial therapies not discussed in this paper. Gregor Reid is a 
scientific advisor to Seed. Azza A.Gadir is involved in research and 
development at Seed, and is developing intellectual property related to 
microbial regulation of immune mechanisms underlying food allergies, which is 
not discussed in this paper.

____________

References

[1] FAO/WHO. (2002). Guidelines for the evaluation of probiotics in food. 
http://www.fao.org/food/food-safety-quality/a-z-index/probiotics/en/

[2] Hill, C., Guarner, F., Reid, G., Gibson, G. R., Merenstein, D., Pot, B., 
and Morelli, L. et al. (2014). The International Scientific Association for 
Probiotics and Prebiotics consensus statement on the scope and appropriate use 
of the term probiotics. Nat. Reviews Gastroenterol. Hepatol. 11(8):506-14.

Authors

Dr. Gregor Reid, BSc (Hons), PhD, MBA, ARM CCM, Dr HS, FCAHS, FRSC is the 
Director of the Canadian R&D Centre for Human Microbiome and Probiotics at 
Lawson Health Research Institute, an inductee into the Royal Society of Canada, 
and previously served as the President of the International Scientific 
Association of Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP). He is perhaps best known as 
the Chair of the United Nations World Health Organization Expert Panel on 
Probiotics, leading the group that authored the globally accepted definition of 
'probiotics'. Dr. Reid has authored over 520 peer-reviewed papers published in 
scientific and medical journals, has been a reviewer for 48 international 
agencies (including the National Institute of Health) and 112 scientific 
journals; he has been awarded 28 patents and cited over 27,000 times. He also 
serves as Chief Scientist to Seed.

*

Dr. Azza A. Gadir, PhD completed her postdoctoral training in the laboratory of 
Dr. Talal Chatila at Harvard Medical School/Boston Children's Hospital, where 
her published research focuses on the immunological mechanisms that underlie 
food allergy. She is specifically interested in understanding the role of the 
gut microbiome in conferring protection to diseases early in life. For this 
work, she is co-inventor of a patent for microbial consortia that can reduce 
and/or eliminate food allergy and has collaborated with industry partners to 
accelerate the discovery of microbiome-related immunotherapies for food 
allergy. She is Director of R+D at Seed.

*

Raja Dhir is a life sciences entrepreneur and Co-Founder of Seed, where he 
leads R+D, academic collaborations, technology development, clinical trial 
design, supply chain, and intellectual property strategy. Raja serves on the 
Editorial Board for the scientific journal, Microbiome. He is a member of the 
Microbiome Think Tank at Mass. General Hospital (MGH) and is a member of the 
Advisory Committee for the International Scientific Association of Probiotics 
and Prebiotics (ISAPP).

About Seed(R)
Seed [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2400860-1&h=1722591330&u=http%3A%2F%2Fseed.com%2F&a=Seed 
] is a life science and consumer health company pioneering the inquiry and 
application of microbiome science to improve human and planetary health. In 
collaboration with leading scientists and a global network of partners and 
experts in biofermentation, stabilization and testing, Seed is setting a new 
standard in bacteria. Its environmental R+D arm, SeedLabs [ 
https://c212.net/c/link/?t=0&l=en&o=2400860-1&h=1820204065&u=http%3A%2F%2Fseed.com%2Fseedlabs&a=SeedLabs 
] , also develops novel applications for bacteria to solve some of our biggest 
ecological challenges.

Contact:
Erin Allweiss 
seed@thenumber29.com   
+1-202-446-8265 


SOURCE  Seed