Infants often experience functional gastrointestinal symptoms (e.g., colic, excessive gas, regurgitation, constipation, or loose stools) that distress families and may reflect an imbalance of the gut microbiome. This study evaluates whether the multistrain probiotic BioAmicus Complete can improve caregiver-reported gastrointestinal symptoms in infants 0-24 months and is safe for use in this population. The primary assessment is the change in the Infant Gastrointestinal Symptom Questionnaire (IGSQ) total score from the start to the end of the study period. Secondary assessments include symptom domains (colic/regurgitation, stool frequency and consistency), caregiver quality of life, growth parameters (weight and length), health care utilization and antibiotic exposure, and overall safety/tolerability (adverse events and serious adverse events). Stool samples will be analyzed to explore changes in the gut microbiome.
caregiver burden and health care visits. Modulating the developing gut microbiome with probiotics may alleviate these symptoms. BioAmicus Complete is a multistrain probiotic designed to support a healthy intestinal microbiota; systematic clinical evaluation is warranted to determine its efficacy and safety in infants. Objectives: Primary: Determine whether BioAmicus Complete improves overall gastrointestinal symptoms versus usual care, measured by change in IGSQ total score between baseline and study end. Exploratory (microbiome): Characterize changes in stool microbiome composition and diversity across the study period. Secondary: Compare groups on symptom domain scores (e.g., colic, regurgitation, stooling patterns), caregiver burden/quality of life, health care utilization and antibiotic exposure, growth parameters, and safety outcomes (adverse events, serious adverse events, and product-related events). Significance: Findings will inform whether BioAmicus Complete can be recommended as an adjunct to routine care for infant functional gastrointestinal symptoms and will provide preliminary insights into microbiome changes associated with symptom improvement.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
110
Oral liquid probiotic (multistrain) administered by caregivers per protocol/label for 42 days to infants with functional GI symptoms. Given as drops by mouth; dosing and administration instructions per protocol. No other probiotic products allowed during the study. Concomitant medications and routine management may be used as clinically indicated. Adherence is recorded; lot/batch number captured.
Standard clinical management for infant functional gastrointestinal symptoms per local practice. No probiotic supplementation is provided during the study period. Participants follow the same visit and assessment schedule as the intervention arm. Concomitant medications and supportive care may be used as clinically indicated.
Clinical Trial and Bioequivalence Center
Haiphong, Hai Phong, Vietnam
RECRUITINGChange from Baseline in Infant Gastrointestinal Symptom Questionnaire (IGSQ) Total Score at Day 42
IGSQ is a 13-item, caregiver-reported questionnaire (total score 13-65; higher scores indicate worse symptoms). Change is calculated as Day 42 minus baseline; a negative change indicates improvement
Time frame: Baseline to Day 42
Stool Microbiome - Change in Alpha Diversity (Shannon, Chao1)
16S rRNA gene sequencing of stool at baseline and Day 42; alpha diversity indices computed and change analyzed within and between groups.
Time frame: Baseline to Day 42
Change in Stool Frequency Based on Infant & Toddler GI Symptom Questionnaire from Baseline to Day 42
Stool frequency is assessed. Responses range from 1 (≤2 times/week) to 5 (\>3 times/day). Higher scores indicate more frequent bowel movements (diarrhea tendency), while lower scores indicate infrequent stools (constipation). Improvement is defined as movement toward the normal category (1 bowel movement/day).
Time frame: Baseline to Day 42
Change in Stool Consistency Using the Brussels Infant and Toddler Stool Scale (BITSS) from Baseline to Day 42
Stool consistency is assessed using the Brussels Infant and Toddler Stool Scale (BITSS), with five categories: 1 = watery, 2 = soft, 3 = formed, 4 = hard, 5 = inconsistent. Category 3 (formed) is considered normal. Scores below 3 represent looser stools (diarrhea tendency), while scores above 3 represent harder stools (constipation tendency). Improvement is defined as a ≥1-category change toward formed stool.
Time frame: Up to Day 42
Stool Microbiome - Between-Group Difference in Beta Diversity (PERMANOVA)
Bray-Curtis and UniFrac distances used to assess community differences between groups; hypothesis testing via PERMANOVA.
Time frame: Day 42
Change in Frequency of Regurgitation and Vomiting Episodes from Baseline to Day 42
Regurgitation and vomiting are assessed using Questions. Frequency is reported on a 7-point ordinal scale (0 = never to 6 = \>5 times/day). Higher scores indicate more frequent regurgitation/vomiting (worse outcome). Improvement is defined as a reduction of ≥1 category on the frequency scale.
Time frame: Baseline to Day 42
Change in Colic Symptoms Based on Infant & Toddler GI Symptom Questionnaire from Baseline to Day 42
Colic is assessed, based on Wessel's criteria (≥3 hours/day, ≥3 days/week, for ≥3 weeks). Responses are scored on a binary scale (Yes/No). Presence of colic is considered a positive outcome at baseline. Improvement is defined as resolution of criteria (reduction below threshold)
Time frame: Baseline to Day 42
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