| Literature DB >> 27258308 |
Francesca Penagini1, Dario Dilillo2, Barbara Borsani3, Lucia Cococcioni4, Erica Galli5, Giorgio Bedogni6, Giovanna Zuin7, Gian Vincenzo Zuccotti8.
Abstract
Nutrition is involved in several aspects of pediatric inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), ranging from disease etiology to induction and maintenance of disease. With regards to etiology, there are pediatric data, mainly from case-control studies, which suggest that some dietary habits (for example consumption of animal protein, fatty foods, high sugar intake) may predispose patients to IBD onset. As for disease treatment, exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) is an extensively studied, well established, and valid approach to the remission of pediatric Crohn's disease (CD). Apart from EEN, several new nutritional approaches are emerging and have proved to be successful (specific carbohydrate diet and CD exclusion diet) but the available evidence is not strong enough to recommend this kind of intervention in clinical practice and new large experimental controlled studies are needed, especially in the pediatric population. Moreover, efforts are being made to identify foods with anti-inflammatory properties such as curcumin and long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids n-3, which can possibly be effective in maintenance of disease. The present systematic review aims at reviewing the scientific literature on all aspects of nutrition in pediatric IBD, including the most recent advances on nutritional therapy.Entities:
Keywords: children; etiology; inflammatory bowel disease; nutrition; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27258308 PMCID: PMC4924175 DOI: 10.3390/nu8060334
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Flow-chart on the methods of the systematic review.
Dietary factors and etiology in pediatric IBD. IBD = inflammatory bowel disease, UC = ulcerative colitis, CD = Crohn’s disease, LC = long chain.
| Dietary Factors and Etiology in Pediatric IBD | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Main Findings |
| Gilat | Case-control study | Patients with IBD ( | - Patients with CD and UC consumed significantly lower fruits and vegetables than controls ( |
| Japanese Epidemiology Group of the Research Committee of IBD, 1994 [ | Case-control study | Patients with UC ( | - Combined consumption of Western foods (bread for breakfast, butter, margarine, cheese, meats, and ham and sausage) was significantly related to an increased risk of UC (Relative risk (RR) for low consumption 1.0, RR for intermediate consumption 1.9; 95% CI 1.0 to 3.7, RR for high consumption 2.1, 95% CI 1.0 to 4.1; trend, |
| Baron | Case-control study | IBD patients ( | - Breastfeeding either partially or exclusively was a risk factor for CD (CD OR = 2.1; 95% CI 1.3 to 3.4, |
| Amre | Case-control study | Children and adolescents ≤20 years ( | - Higher amounts of vegetables (OR = 0.69; 95% CI 0.33 to 1.44, |
| D’Souza | Case-control study | Children and adolescents ≤20 years ( | - Meats, fatty foods and desserts (OR = 4.7; 95% CI 1.6 to 14.2) were positively associated with CD. |
| Jakobsen | Case-control study | Children and adolescents with IBD ( | - High sugar intakes were a risk factor for IBD (IBD OR = 2.5; 95% CI 1.0 to 6.2, CD OR = 2.9; 95% CI 1.0 to 8.5). |
Clinical studies on efficacy of exclusive enteral nutrition in pediatric CD. CREN = constant rate enteral nutrition, PF = polymeric formula, ED = elemental diet, PCDAI = Pediatric Crohn Disease Activity Index, PEN = partial enteral nutrition, EEN = exclusive enteral nutrition, IFX = infliximab, anti-TNF = anti-tumor necrosis factor, TGFβ2 = transforming growth factor beta 2.
| Clinical Studies on Efficacy of Exclusive Enteral Nutrition | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Navarro | Clinical trial | Children with active CD ( | Exclusive constant rate enteral nutrition (CREN) using a combination of elemental diet and continuous alimentation for 2–7 months, subsequently CREN used to supplement oral alimentation from 12 to 22 months. | After 7 months of exclusive CREN: all children’s symptoms improved; 100% of children presented moderate disease (Lloyd Still and Green scoring >50). |
| Fell | Clinical trial | Children with active CD ( | EEN with TGFβ2 enriched PF for 8 weeks. | - After 8 weeks 79% (23/29) of children were in clinical remission. |
| Afzal | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents with active CD ( | EEN with PF for 8 weeks. | 88.6% achieved clinical remission. |
| Bannerjee | Clinical trial | Children with active CD ( | EEN with PF for 6 weeks. | Significant improvements in inflammatory markers by day 3 ( |
| Gavin | Retrospective cohort study | Children and adolescents with new onset CD ( | EEN with PF for 8 weeks. | All patients improved symptomatically and gained weight after 8 weeks of EEN. |
| Afzal | Prospective cohort study | Children and adolescents with active CD ( | EEN with PF for 8 weeks. | 77% remission rate. Remission rates: Colonic group: 50% (7/14), ileocolon group 82.1% (32/39), ileum group 91.7% (11/12), (χ2 test, |
| Knight | Retrospective cohort study | Children with CD ( | Treatment with EEN as primary treatment for 6–8 weeks. | 90% (40/44) of patients responded to EEN with a median time to remission of 6 weeks. Crohn’s disease activity index (CDAI) decreased from pre-EEN to post-EEN, mean values of CDAI not available. |
| Day | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed CD (group 1, | - Group 1: EEN with PF for 6–8 weeks as sole initial therapy | Twenty-four (89%) of 27 children completed their prescribed course of EEN. Nineteen (79%) of 24 children entered clinical remission (80% (12/15) in group 1 and 58% (7/12) in group 2). There was no clear relationship between disease location and response to treatment: 75% (3/4) with isolated small bowel, 72.5% (10/14) with ileocolonic and 67% (6/9) with pancolic disease attained remission ( |
| De Bie | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed CD ( | Patients received EEN (as either hyperosmolar sip feeds or PF by nasogastric tube) for 6 weeks as remission induction therapy, combined with azathioprine maintenance treatment in 92%. | In patients completing a 6-week course of EEN (58) complete remission was achieved in 71% of patients, partial remission in 26%, and no response in 3%. Complete remission rates were higher in children presenting with isolated ileal/ileocaecal disease and malnutrition. |
| Grover | Clinical trial | Children with newly diagnosed predominantly luminal CD ( | EEN for 6–8 weeks in association with early thiopurine treatment (<3 months from diagnosis). Median duration between pre and post EEN assessments was 60.5 days (IQR 56–69.5) | Post EEN: remission rate (PCDAI < 10) 83% (45/54), biochemical remission (CR |
Clinical studies comparing efficacy between two enteral nutrition regimens. PCDAI = Pediatric Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, PF = polymeric formula, ED = elemental diet, PEN = partial enteral nutrition, EEN = exclusive enteral nutrition, IFX = infliximab, anti-TNF = anti-tumor necrosis factor, TGFβ2 = transforming growth factor beta 2, ARC = absolute risk change.
| Clinical Studies Comparing Efficacy between Two Enteral Nutrition Regimens | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Akobeng | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active CD ( | Standard PF with a low glutamine content (4% of amino-acid composition, group S) | - No difference in remission rates at week 4 between the two groups’ remission 5/9 (55.5%) in group S, 4/9 (44.4%) in group G ( |
| Ludvigsson | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active CD ( | Exclusive EEN with ED ( | - Similar remission rates at 6 weeks (ED 11/16 (69%), PF 14/17 (82%); |
| Johnson | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active CD ( | Patients randomly assigned to receive: | Remission rate with PEN was lower than with EEN (PEN 4/26 (15%), EEN 10/24 (42%) |
| Rodrigues | Retrospective cohort study | Children with active CD ( | Children received EEN at the time of first presentation either PF ( | Remission rates were similar between children receiving PF and ED (ED 64%, 95% CI 51–77 |
| Hartman | Retrospective cohort study | Children with CD ( | Group 1 ( | Supplementation of the diet with PF (both TGFβ enriched and standard) was associated with a decrease in PCDAI (in group 1 from 34.3 to 15.7, |
| Rubio | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed CD or with a first relapse of an established disease on stable medical treatment ( | Children received EEN with PF for 8 weeks as remission induction therapy either per os (group 1, | Fractionated oral nutritional therapy (group 1) didn’t significantly differ from continuous enteral administration (group 2) in inducing remission (75% |
| Grogan | Double-blind randomized controlled trial | Children with newly diagnosed CD ( | Children were randomized to ED ( | No significant difference was recorded between ED and PF in inducing remission (93% 14/15 |
| Lee | Prospective study | Children with active CD ( | Children were treated with anti-TNF ( | Clinical remission (final PCDAI ≤ 10) was achieved by 50% on PEN, 76% EEN, and 73% anti-TNF ( |
Clinical studies comparing exclusive enteral nutrition to corticosteroids. PCDAI = Pediatric Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, ED = elemental diet, PEN = partial enteral nutrition, CS = corticosteroids, EEN = exclusive enteral nutrition, IFX = infliximab, anti-TNF = anti-tumor necrosis factor, TGFβ2 = transforming growth factor beta 2, ARC = absolute risk change.
| Clinical Studies Comparing Exclusive Enteral Nutrition to Corticosteroids | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Sanderson | Randomized controlled trial | Children and adolescents with active CD aged 8.6–17.2 years ( | - 8 children treated with CS | - Disease activity (Lloyd–Still activity index) of the children improved significantly in both ED and PF groups after 6 weeks ( |
| Thomas | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active CD ( | Children randomized to receive ED ( | - Similar improvement in disease activity (PCDAI) and remission duration in both groups regardless of site of disease. In CS group activity index at baseline: 74, at week 4: 85, median change +11, ( |
| Ruuska | Randomized controlled trial | Children with new onset or relapsing CD ( | - 10 children treated with a whole-protein based formula through a nasogastric tube for 11 weeks | - Similar improvements of PCDAI index, clinical symptoms and inflammatory markers within 2 weeks of treatment in both groups. After the end of the follow-up period 2 months after cessation of the treatment, PCDAI was still low in both groups (PCDAI 11.9 ± 7.9 in enteral diet group and 14.3 ± 9.6 in CS group) |
| Terrin | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active CD ( | - Group A: CS and mesalazine ( | - Clinical remission was achieved in 90% (9/10) of patients in group B but only in 50% (5/10) in corticosteroid group ( |
| Borrelli | Randomized controlled trial | Children with active naïve CD ( | - 19 children received EEN with PF for 10 weeks | At week 10 the remission rate was comparable between two groups: 15/19 (79%, 95% CI 56–92) in PF group and 12/18 (67%, 95% CI 44–84) in CS group ( |
| Berni Canani | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed CD ( | Children received nutritional therapy (NT) for 8 weeks as | Similar clinical remission rates were observed after 8 weeks of treatment: 86.5% (32/37) receiving NT |
| Soo | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed CD ( | Children received either EEN ( | Remission rate similar in two groups 88.9% (32/36) in the EEN group |
| Luo | Retrospective cohort study | Children with newly diagnosed mild to moderate CD. | Children received either EEN ( | The remission rate in EEN group was significantly higher than that in CS group (90.0% |
| Grover | Retrospective analysis of records | Children with newly diagnosed CD ( | Children received either EEN ( | Choice of EEN over CS induction was associated with reduced linear growth failure (7% |
Novel nutritional approaches for induction of remission in pediatric IBD. SCD = Specific Carbohydrate Diet. CD = Crohn’s Disease, PEN = partial enteral nutrition, PCDAI = Pediatric Crohn’s Disease Activity Index, IR = incidence rate.
| Novel Nutritional Approaches for Induction of Remission in Pediatric IBD | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Gupta | Retrospective cohort study | Children with active CD ( | Enteral nutrition providing 80%–90% of caloric needs, remaining calories from normal diet | Induction of remission achieved in 65% of cases and response in 87% of cases at a mean follow-up of 2 months. |
| Suskind | Retrospective cohort study | Children and adolescents with active CD ( | SCD as treatment of active CD (either soon after diagnosis, or as second line therapy if steroid dependent or failure of mesalazine treatment). Duration of dietary therapy: 5–30 months. | Symptoms of all patients resolved at a routine clinic visit 3 months after initiating the diet. Laboratory indices and fecal calprotectin either normalized or significantly improved at the follow-up clinic visits. |
| Cohen | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents with active CD, mean age 13.6 years ( | SCD for 101% caloric needs, for 12 and 52 weeks. | At both: 12 week and 52-week endpoint s, there was clinical improvement assessed by PCDAI. In 6/10 patients (60%) remission was achieved by week 12. IR = 0.60 (exact 95% CI 0.26 to 0.88). Mucosal healing (Lewis score < 135) was observed in 40% (4/10) of patients at week 12. IR = 0.40 (exact 95% CI 0.12 to 0.74). 80% showed significant mucosal improvement at week 12 when compared to baseline ( |
| Sigall-Boneh | Clinical trial | Children and young adults with active CD | PEN with a CD exclusion diet + 50% polymeric formula for 6 weeks. | Response and remission was obtained in 37 (78.7%) and 33 (70.2%) patients respectively. IR = 0.79 (exact 95% CI 0.64 to 0.89). Remission was obtained in 70% of children and 69% of adults. IR = 0.70 (exact 95% CI 0.55 to 0.83). |
Nutrition in maintenance of disease remission. ED = elemental diet, MEN = maintenance enteral nutrition, EEN = exclusive enteral nutrition, SCD = specific carbohydrate diet, CRP = C-reactive protein, BMI = body mass index, 5-ASA = 5-aminosalycilates, ARC = risk change.
| Nutrition in Maintenance of Disease Remission in Pediatric IBD | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Belli | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents with CD ( | - 8 children treated with chronic Intermittent ED for 1 month out of 4, over the course of 1 year | - CD activity index and prednisone intake decreased significantly in patients receiving ED therapy when compared with controls on conventional medical therapy ( |
| Duncan | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents newly diagnosed CD ( | Patients newly diagnosed CD who commenced EEN for 8 weeks, than followed up: | - Remission rates at 1 year in patients continuing MEN were 60% (9/15), compared to 15% (2/13) in patients taking no treatment ( |
| Wilschanski | Retrospective cohort study | Children and adolescents ( | After induction of remission of CD with EEN: | - Higher relapse rate in group 2 |
| Obih | Retrospective cohort study | Children affected by IBD ( | - Group of patients ( | - In SCD group PCDAI improved from 32.8 ± 13.2 at baseline to 20.8 ± 16.6 by week 4 ± 2 w and 8.8 ± 8.5 by month 6. |
| Hanai H | Randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Adolescents and adults with quiescent UC aged 13–65 years ( | - 43 patients received curcumin 2 g/day plus sulfasalazine or mesalazine; | - Relapse rate at 6 months of therapy was lower for curcumin group compared to placebo group: |
| Suskind | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents ( | All patients, in addition to their standard IBD therapy, received increasing doses of curcumin, up to 2 g twice daily for 3 weeks | - High tolerability of curcumin without side effects except for increase in gassiness which was consistently reported in two patients. Three patients had lowering of PUCAI/PCDAI scores. |
| Romano | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study | Children and adolescents affected by CD ( | - Group 1 ( | Number of patients who relapsed at 12 months was significantly lower in Omega-3 fatty acid group than in patients receiving placebo (relapse rate group 1 11/18 (61%), group 2 19/20 (95%); |
Health benefits of nutritional therapy in pediatric IBD. ED = elemental diet, REE = resting energy expenditure, IGF-1 = insulin like growth factor 1, IGFBP-3 = insulin like growth factor binding protein, EEN = exclusive enteral nutrition, corticosteroids = CS.
| Health Benefits of Nutritional Therapy in Pediatric IBD | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author/Year | Study Type | Population | Method | Main Findings |
| Azcue | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents affected by CD ( | - Group of patients ( | - All body compartments and REE increased significantly in enteral nutrition group compared to patients treated with corticosteroids. In enteral nutrition group REE (kcal/day) from 1153 ± 283 at baseline to 1415 ± 535 at 1 month post-treatment; in prednisolone group REE at baseline 1380 ± 308 to 1432 ± 265 at one month post-treatment. For lean body mass (LBM % weight) in enteral nutrition group 86.6 ± 8.9 at baseline to 88.8 + 9.9 at one month post-treatment, in prednisolone group 87.5 ± 9.4 at baseline to 79.1 ± 9.4 at one month post-treatment. |
| Beattie | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents affected by CD ( | - Study A: 14 patients treated with EEN for 8 weeks, then gradual reduction of nutritional support over 2 months | Study A |
| Wilschanski | Retrospective cohort study | Children and adolescents ( | After induction of remission of CD with EEN: | - Mean changes in height velocity was greater for group 1 (2.87 cm/year) compared to group 2 (0.4 cm/year), |
| Belli | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents with CD ( | - 8 children treated with chronic intermittent enteral ED for 1 month out of 4, over the course of 1 year | - Significant height and weight gains in the ED group |
| Berni Canani | Retrospective study | Children and adolescents affected by active CD ( | Children received nutritional therapy (NT) for 8 weeks as | - Significant improvement of serum albumin and iron levels in NT compared to CS group. In NT group elemental: albumin at baseline 13.14 ± 0.47 to 3.98 ± 0.36 at 8 weeks, |
| Motil | Clinical trial | Adolescents affected by CD | - 6 patients affected by CD received nutritional supplements for 7 months | Increase of linear and ponderal growth velocities in patients treated with nutritional support (Height gain cm/month pre-supplements 0.10 ± 0.08, post-supplements 0.50 + 0.16; weight gain kg/month pre-supplements 0.21 ± 0.09, post-supplements 1.22 ± 0.25). Achievement of weight and height gain similar to control group levels after the 7 months treatment with nutritional supplements (height gain cm/month 0.38 ± 0.12, weight gain kg/month 0.40 + 0.17). |
| O’Morain | Clinical trial | Children and adolescents affected by CD ( | 14 patients received ED as the main energy source for 4 weeks; 1 received corticosteroids. | Improvement of nutritional status, weight, and height gain in children receiving ED. |
| Whitten | Clinical trial | Children newly diagnosed CD ( | Children newly diagnosed with CD received 8 weeks EEN for induction of remission | Normalization of serum markers of bone turnover after EEN therapy. CTX levels at diagnosis 2.967 ± 0.881 ng/mL and after EEN 2.260 ± 0.547 ng/mL, |
| Polk | Clinical trial | Adolescents affected by CD ( | All patients received enteral nutrition via nasogastric tube during night 1 out of 4 months for 1 year. Then the patients received a 2-week exclusion diet and a 2-week low-residue diet for 2 months, before re-starting a normal diet. | Significant increase of weight, height, IGF-1, and albumin; decrease of steroid use and disease activity compared to pretreatment values |