AI Article Synopsis

  • Rosacea is a common skin condition characterized by redness, visible blood vessels, and acne-like symptoms, often treated with antibiotics, but extended use can lead to resistance and side effects.
  • This study explored the effects of probiotics combined with doxycycline treatment on rosacea, finding that probiotics improved skin conditions, decreased inflammation, and altered gut microbiota composition among participants.
  • Results indicated that the probiotic group experienced better skin health outcomes with reduced sebum and inflammation, as well as fewer antibiotic resistance genes compared to controls, supporting a connection between gut health and skin condition.

Article Abstract

Unlabelled: Rosacea is a chronic inflammatory skin condition marked by facial erythema, telangiectasia, and acne-like eruptions, affecting millions worldwide. While antibiotics remain a common treatment, prolonged use has significant adverse effects and can lead to antibiotic resistance. This study evaluated the impact of combined probiotics and doxycycline treatment on rosacea, emphasizing the gut-skin axis. Sixty rosacea patients were randomly assigned to the probiotic, placebo, or control groups. After a 2-week doxycycline treatment, participants underwent a 3-month intervention with either a placebo, probiotic, or no further treatment. Clinical outcomes were assessed at baseline and after the 14-week intervention. Our results showed that probiotic administration improved facial skin conditions, alleviated inflammation, and reduced facial skin microbiota diversity while enhancing gut microbiota heterogeneity. Multivariate analysis identified microbial markers distinguishing the probiotic group from the control and placebo groups, and some markers were associated with skin health parameters. After the probiotic intervention, some facial skin-associated taxa, such as sp., sp. 1, sp. 2, and , decreased in abundance. Additionally, the fecal microbiota of the probiotic group was enriched in specific gut microbes, including , , and , while showing a reduced abundance of . These changes were associated with reduced facial sebum levels and a lower physician's global assessment score. Finally, fewer antibiotic resistance genes, particularly tetracycline resistance genes, were detected in the probiotic group compared with the control and placebo groups. Our study supports the existence of a gut-skin axis and the application of probiotics in managing rosacea.

Importance: This research elucidates rosacea management with novel insights into probiotic use alongside doxycycline, showing dual benefits in symptom relief and inflammation reduction in patients. The study maps probiotic-induced shifts in gut and skin microbiota, underscoring microbial shifts correlating with skin health improvements. Crucially, it deciphers the gut-skin axis modulation by probiotics, proposing a method to curb antibiotic resistance in rosacea therapies. This study furnishes robust evidence for probiotics in rosacea, advancing our grasp of the gut-skin relationship.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11575305PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msystems.01201-24DOI Listing

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