High-Fiber Diet and Crohn’s Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design and Information Sources
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
- Observational studies;
- Clinical trials;
- Studies that analyzed the consumption of a diet rich in fiber to maintain CD remission;
- Studies in Spanish or English.
- Studies that were conducted with animals;
- Studies that did not include patients with CD in their study population.
2.4. Selection of Studies
2.5. Evaluation of the Quality of the Studies
2.6. Data Extraction
2.7. Analysis of the Data Obtained
3. Results
3.1. High-Fiber Diet vs. Normal Diet vs. Gluten-Free Diet
Author/Year/Country | Design | Population | Intervention | Results | Conclusions | Quality of the Studies |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Schreiner P, et al. [26] 2019 Switzerland | Prospective cohort study | 1313 subjects (pediatric and adult IBD patients belonging to the IBDCS study carried out in 2006 by Pittet V, et al. [36]). | FFQ completed by patients with IBD (from a Swiss cohort with a 9-year follow-up) who consumed a vegetarian and a gluten-free diet. | Uncomplicated CD rate of 57.6% for the vegetarian diet vs. 39.5% for the normal diet; greater complications in subjects who consumed a normal diet vs. those who consumed a vegetarian diet (60.5 vs. 42.4%), with p value = 0.039 | Changes were evidenced in the microbiota of subjects who consumed a vegetarian diet, but there was no clinical improvement in IBD. | 7/11 |
Tasson, L, et al. [27] 2017 Italy | Cross-sectional study | 103 subjects over 18 years of age diagnosed with IBD at least one year before starting the study (50 with active disease and 53 in remission). | FFQ completed by patients with IBD during 1 year of follow-up. | Odds ratio (OR) of new relapses of 1 and similar for Q1–Q3 who habitually consumed fruit and vegetables; an OR of 0.43 was observed for Q4, with a value of p = 0.14. | Foods rich in fiber had a protective effect on acute flare-ups in patients with IBD. | 8/8 |
Dolovich C, et al. [28] 2022 Canada | Cohort study | 153 participants aged 18–70 years diagnosed with IBD | FFQ questionnaire with 2 years of follow-up. | OR of 0.47 of CD flare-ups in subjects who obtained maximum scores (29–40); OR of 3.63 in the same subjects who obtained scores of 21–24. | There was a positive association between the quality of the diet and the absence of CD flare-ups. | 8/11 |
Chiba M, et al. [29] 2017 Japan | Quasi-experimental trial | 60 patients started the protocol, of whom 44 with CD were between 13 and 77 years of age. | Infliximab + vegetable diet for patients with CD for 6 weeks. | Of the 44 patients who consumed a high-fiber diet combined with infliximab, all maintained clinical remission, 84% experienced a decrease in C-reactive protein (CRP), and 46% experienced mucosal healing, with p values > 0.05. | Infliximab in combination with a high-fiber diet induced remission in the majority of CD patients. | 8/9 |
Chiba M, et al. [30] 2010 Japan | Quasi-experimental trial | 22 CD patients aged 19 to 77 years who achieved remission with infliximab, metronidazole, or surgery at Nakadori General Hospital. | Semivegetarian diet (32.4 g/day of fiber) for patients with CD for 2 years. | Of the 22 patients, 17 completed the follow-up without relapses at two years from the start of the study; 5 experienced relapses. | A semivegetarian diet was safe and effective in maintaining remission in patients with CD, reducing the CRP levels. | 6/9 |
Chiba M, et al. [31] 2022 Japan | Quasi-experimental trial | 24 CD patients aged 19–65 years receiving initial treatment with infliximab. | Infliximab + vegetarian diet (32.4 g/2000 kcal) with a 10-year follow-up. | At 4 years, 52% of the subjects were flare-up free; 19% required surgery at 10 years. | Infliximab in conjunction with a high-fiber diet improved long-term remission rates for individuals with CD. | 8/9 |
Heaton K, et al. [32] 1979 England | RCT | 64 patients in total: 32 patients with CD (experimental group) and 32 patients in the control group. | Diet rich in fiber (33.4 g/day) for the experimental group and a normal diet for the control group for 5 years. | Average of 11 hospitalizations in the intervention group vs. 34 for the control group, with a p value < 0.01; median of 6 days of hospitalization in the experimental group vs. 15 days in the control group, with p < 0.02. | A diet rich in fiber improved the prognosis of patients with CD, reducing the need for hospitalizations. | 8/13 |
Mirmiran P, et al. [33] 2019 Tehran | Cross-sectional study | 143 patients with IBD, and 32 with CD. | FFQ completed by patients with IBD, with a follow-up of 14 months. | Usual average fruit consumption of 297 g/day by individuals with inactive CD vs. 288 g/day by individuals with active CD, with p = 0.51; mean average consumption of vegetables of 190 g/day by individuals with inactive CD vs. 193 g/day by individuals with active CD, with p = 0.72. | No significant differences were found between the consumption of fruits and vegetables in relation to CD activity. | 7/8 |
Brotherton C, et al. [21] 2016 USA | Cohort study | 1619 adults, of whom 577 with CD were in clinical remission. | 26-item survey with a 6-month follow-up. | OR of 0.72 for subjects with CD in Q2 who consumed 13.4 g/day of fiber; OR of 0.57 for Q4 subjects who consumed 23.7 g/day | The consumption of fiber in the diet was associated with fewer recurrences of CD. | 7/11 |
Opstelten J, et al. [22] 2019b Netherlands | Cross-sectional study (diet of IBD patients vs. healthy patients) and longitudinal study evaluating the risk of flare-ups | 165 subjects aged 18–70 years with a diagnosis of IBD (participants in the longitudinal part of the study). | FFQ completed by subjects with IBD with a follow-up of 29 months. | OR = 3.65 for a fiber consumption of 21.5 g/day, with a statistically significant p value < 0.05. | There was a positive association between high fiber intake and the risk of flare-ups in patients with CD | 6/8 |
Lacerda J, et al. [34] 2021 Portugal | RCT | 53 subjects: 25 patients with IBD (experimental group) and 28 healthy controls; of the experimental group, 13 had CD. | Mediterranean diet for 8 weeks and adjusted to caloric needs; in the intervention group, a greater supply of fiber (beta-glucans) was added, and the control group received a normal supply of fiber. | 100% of CD patients who consumed a personalized diet were free of flare-ups. In 8 weeks, fiber consumption increased from 21.2 to 30.1 g/day (p = 0.01), CRP levels decreased from 5.6 to 1.8 mg/dL (p = 0.142), and fecal calprotectin decreased from 470 to 316 μg/g (p = 0.47). | The inclusion of specific and personalized nutritional components in the diet was not conclusive regarding producing benefits during CD. | 9/13 |
3.2. High-Fiber Diet
3.3. High-Fiber Diet Combined with Infliximab
3.4. Safety of a High-Fiber Diet for Individuals with CD
4. Discussion
4.1. Limitations and Strengths of the Review
4.2. Implications for Practice
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Population | Intervention | Control | Result |
---|---|---|---|
Patients with CD | High-fiber diet with or without cointerventions | Conventional therapies (corticosteroids, immunosuppressants, and biological therapies) or other diets | Prevention of flare-ups of CD and improvements in the disease with a diet rich in fiber |
Database | Search String | Filters |
---|---|---|
PubMed | (Inflammatory bowel disease OR IBD OR Crohn’s disease) AND (dietary fiber OR dietary fiber OR diet) NOT (exclusion diet) NOT (FODMAP) NOT (Western diet) NOT (Mediterranean diet) NOT (enteral nutrition) NOT (elemental diet) | “Clinical study”, “clinical trial” and “observational study” |
Scopus | TITLE (“inflammatory bowel disease”) OR TITLE (“IBD”) OR TITLE (“Crohn’s disease”) AND TITLE (“dietary fiber”) OR TITLE (“dietary fiber”) OR TITLE (“diet”) AND NOT TITLE (“exclusion diet”) OR TITLE (“FODMAP”) OR TITLE (“Western diet”) OR TITLE (“Mediterranean diet”) OR TITLE (“enteral nutrition”) OR TITLE (“elemental diet”) | Language (English and Spanish) and type of document (articles) |
Web of Science | (((((((((TS=(“inflammatory bowel disease”)) OR TS=(“IBD”)) OR TS=(“Crohn’s disease”)) AND TS=(“dietary fiber”)) NOT TS=(“exclusion diet”)) NOT TS=(“FODMAP”)) NOT TS=(“Western diet”)) NOT TS=(“Mediterranean diet”)) NOT TS=(“enteral nutrition”)) NOT TS=(“elemental diet”) | None |
ClinicalTrials | (inflammatory bowel disease OR IBD OR Crohn’s disease) AND (dietary fiber OR dietary fiber OR diet) NOT (exclusion diet) NOT (FODMAP) NOT (Western diet) NOT (Mediterranean diet) NOT (enteral nutrition) NOT (elemental diet) | None |
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Serrano Fernandez, V.; Seldas Palomino, M.; Laredo-Aguilera, J.A.; Pozuelo-Carrascosa, D.P.; Carmona-Torres, J.M. High-Fiber Diet and Crohn’s Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients 2023, 15, 3114. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15143114
Serrano Fernandez V, Seldas Palomino M, Laredo-Aguilera JA, Pozuelo-Carrascosa DP, Carmona-Torres JM. High-Fiber Diet and Crohn’s Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients. 2023; 15(14):3114. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15143114
Chicago/Turabian StyleSerrano Fernandez, Victor, Marta Seldas Palomino, José Alberto Laredo-Aguilera, Diana Patricia Pozuelo-Carrascosa, and Juan Manuel Carmona-Torres. 2023. "High-Fiber Diet and Crohn’s Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis" Nutrients 15, no. 14: 3114. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15143114
APA StyleSerrano Fernandez, V., Seldas Palomino, M., Laredo-Aguilera, J. A., Pozuelo-Carrascosa, D. P., & Carmona-Torres, J. M. (2023). High-Fiber Diet and Crohn’s Disease: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Nutrients, 15(14), 3114. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15143114