Using Diet to Treat Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review Journal Articles uri icon

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abstract

  • Objectives: To review the efficacy of various dietary interventions for induction of clinical remission in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and provide healthcare providers with a practical reference for recommending suitable diets for managing patients with IBD. Methods: PubMed, Medline(R), and Cochrane were searched from inception up to February 17, 2023 to identify all studies reporting information on using diet to treat IBD. Studies investigating the role of dietary interventions on adult patients with a confirmed diagnosis of active IBD for improvement or remission of IBD symptoms were rigorously considered. Sample meal plans, with a list of included and excluded foods, were also generated in order to provide clinicians with practical tools for advising patients on dietary intake. Results: Eleven included studies provided data on 10 distinct diets: autoimmune protocol diet, high fiber diet, 4-SURE diet, highly restricted diet, McMaster elimination diet for Crohn’s disease, specific carbohydrate diet, Mediterranean diet, Crohn’s disease exclusion diet, individualized elimination diet, and the food-specific IgG4-guided exclusion diet. A total of 9 studies provided data on clinical remission. Many of these diets share common elements, such as an initial elimination phase with subsequent reintroduction of dietary components, inclusion of whole foods, and exclusion of highly or ultra-processed foods. Conclusion: Currently, there is limited evidence to support the use of specific diets to treat adult patients with mildly to moderately active IBD. Larger, randomized studies with standardized methodologies and outcome measures, rigorous adherence assessment, and an emphasis on endoscopic assessment outcome measures are required to validate most diets that have been studied for IBD. The included sample diet plans and dietary recommendations may prove helpful in the interim as part of a holistic strategy to manage patients with IBD.

publication date

  • July 26, 2024