4.7 Article

A Case-Based Approach to New Directions in Dietary Therapy of Crohn's Disease: Food for Thought

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 12, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu12030880

Keywords

Crohn's disease; microbiome; treatment; inflammatory bowel disease; diet; Crohn's disease exclusion diet (CDED)

Funding

  1. Jaeger foundation
  2. Nestle health science
  3. Litwin and Pioneer awards
  4. Crohn's Colitis Foundation of America
  5. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) New Investigator award
  6. Azrieli foundation
  7. Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba
  8. Emma Children's Hospital Foundation

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Recent evidence has demonstrated that Crohn's disease may have its roots in dysbiosis of the microbiome and other environmental factors. One of the strongest risk factors linked to immune activation appears to be diet. Exclusion diets have been shown to ameliorate inflammation and induce remission in 70-80% of treatment-naive children at disease onset, and to induce remission in patients that lose response or are refractory to currently recommended medical therapy. Recent studies have also linked dietary modulation of the microbiome with clinical remission, while reintroduction of the previous habitual diet led to reactivation of inflammation and reversion of the dysbiotic state. While dietary therapy has usually been used as a first line therapy as a bridge to immunomodulators, newer insights suggest that new treatment paradigms involving dietary therapy may allow different treatment strategies. This case-based narrative review will discuss the Crohn's disease exclusion diet (CDED) as monotherapy, combination therapy with drugs, as a rescue therapy in refractory patients and for de-escalation from medical therapy.

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