The study will be carried out with prior authorization from the Local Research and Ethics
Committee. Patients entitled to our healthcare services and complying with screening criteria
will be included.
Patients with scleroderma included in our database will be invited to participate in the
study through a telephone call. Patients complying with the screening criteria and accepting
to participate in the study will be given a date for an interview.
On the day of the interview, they will be given the informed consent form. Once it has been
signed, they will be asked to complete the NIH PROMIS questionnaire for gastrointestinal
symptoms. In order to validate the questionnaire, it will be translated from English into
Spanish, then back-translated from Spanish into English and submitted to a panel of
gastroenterology experts. Once patients have completed the questionnaire, a Cronbach's alpha
test will be carried out. Another visit will be scheduled two weeks later to perform the
hydrogen breath test and patients will be given instructions to help them complete the test.
On the second visit (two weeks later), the following parameters will be recorded: weight
(measured with a Seca scale without shoes and wearing a hospital gown), height, abdominal
girth at the level of the navel (using a measuring tape), and patients will take the hydrogen
breath test (Gastrolyzer instrument). Patients with a positive result will be randomly
assigned to one of three groups: group 1 (Saccharomyces boulardii), group 2 (metronidazole)
or group 3 (metronidazole + Saccharomyces boulardii).
Group 1. Saccharomyces boulardii 200 mg b.i.d. during 2 weeks, followed by a 2-week rest
period and then again 200 mg b.i.d. during 2 consecutive months.
Group 2. Metronidazole 500 mg b.i.d during 1 week, followed by a 3-week rest period and then
again 500 mg b.i.d during 2 consecutive months.
Group 3. Metronidazole 500 mg b.i.d during 1 week, plus Saccharomyces boulardii 200 mg b.i.d.
during 1 week, follow for only Saccharomyces 200 mg b.i.d. for one another week, 2-week rest
period and then this regimen is repeated for two consecutive months.
Each group will be given written instructions regarding the drug use. At the end of the first
cycle, another visit will be scheduled to check for treatment compliance (remaining capsules
will be counted) and patients will be given a new drug supply for the following month.
Participants will also be asked to complete a form recording GI symptoms and potential
adverse events. At the end of each treatment cycle, patients will have to take the hydrogen
breath test, to complete the NIH PROMIS questionnaire and their weight and height will be
measured. At the end of the second cycle, the statistical analysis will be carried out.
If the episodes of diarrhea or abdominal distension persist for more than 2 weeks, the
probiotic treatment will be withdrawn and the patient will be given the standard treatment.
This questionnaire is used to evaluate gastrointestinal symptoms through 60 questions divided
into 8 domains:
Heartburn / reflux (13 items)
Disrupted swallowing (7 items)
Diarrhea (5 items)
Fecal incontinence (4 items)
Nausea / vomiting (4 items)
Constipation (9 items)
Belly pain (6 items)
Gas / bloating (12 items)
Each question has 5 possible answers scored from 1 to 5. The physician will give the
questionnaire to the patient and will cross out the answer corresponding to symptoms'
severity. At the end of each domain, individual scores are added to calculate a raw score,
from which a percentile is obtained. This finally leads to a symptom severity score.
The patient should prepare for the test by following the instructions from Appendix 3. On the
day of the test, the patient will blow into the mouthpiece of the breath hydrogen monitor
after taking a deep breath. First, a baseline sample will be taken. The hydrogen baseline
level must be under 10 ppm. A baseline hydrogen content over 10 ppm strongly suggests
bacterial overgrowth. Then, the patient has to ingest, within 3 to 5 minutes, 50 g of glucose
dissolved in 250 ml of water. Samples of exhaled air (alveolar air) will be taken after 15,
30, 45, 60, 90, 120 and 150 minutes from the moment the patient has finished taking all the
glucose. Patients with values under 10 ppm but having symptoms associated to glucose
ingestion (headache, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, distension, hyperperistalsis, tiredness)
will have to take the test again using 50 g of lactulose dissolved into 250 ml of water.
In presence of bacterial overgrowth, carbohydrates used as substrate (glucose or lactulose)
typically produce two peaks: an early increase of 10 ppm is observed when the substrate comes
into contact with small intestinal bacteria, and then, after one hour, a second peak (a lot
larger than the first one) is observed, being produced by normal colonic flora fermenting the
remaining substrate The two peaks may merge and form an early plateau. The test is positive
for bacterial overgrowth if the hydrogen level exceeds 10 ppm within 30 minutes of the
lactulose dose or if baseline hydrogen levels exceed 20 ppm. If there is no response to the
substrate, a flat curve can be observed and it should be interpreted as an impairment of the
gut by antimicrobial agents prior to the test, pH changes in the feces at colon level,
extremely slow intestinal transit and predominance of methane-producing bacteria.