Effects of Early Nutritional Intervention on Clinical Remission Rates and Quality of Life in Newly Diagnosed Inflammatory Bowel Disease Patients.

IF 1.1 4区 医学 Q4 NUTRITION & DIETETICS
Yi Gao, Suqin Xia, Xiaoxue Shen
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Abstract

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a chronic gastrointestinal disorder influenced by multiple factors including genetic susceptibility, immune dysregulation, environmental triggers, and nutritional status. Nutritional deficiencies are common in IBD patients and may contribute to disease progression and poor clinical outcomes. In this study, we examined how early nutritional intervention affected clinical remission rates, disease activity, and quality of life in newly diagnosed IBD patients. We retrospectively analyzed clinical data from 153 newly diagnosed IBD patients, dividing them into two groups: 78 patients who received early nutritional intervention combined with conventional treatment (intervention group) and 75 patients who received conventional treatment alone (control group). Following treatment periods of 4, 8, 12, and 24 wk, we assessed clinical remission rates, disease activity indices (CDAI for Crohn's disease and Mayo scores for ulcerative colitis), quality of life scores (IBDQ), inflammatory markers, nutritional status, and disease-related complications. Early nutritional intervention led to enhanced clinical remission rates beginning at 8 wk and continuing through 24 wk. Disease activity indices showed progressive improvement in the intervention group, with both CDAI scores in Crohn's disease patients and Mayo scores in ulcerative colitis patients demonstrating notable reductions by the 24-wk assessment. Quality of life scores improved substantially in the intervention group, particularly evident at the 12 and 24-wk time points. Inflammatory markers, including C-reactive protein, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, and fecal calprotectin, exhibited marked decreases in patients receiving nutritional intervention. Nutritional parameters demonstrated improvement in the intervention group, with both serum albumin and prealbumin levels showing restoration toward normal ranges. Additionally, patients in the intervention group experienced lower rates of rehospitalization, extraintestinal complications, and disease relapse during the 24-wk follow-up period. These findings indicate that early nutritional intervention significantly improves clinical outcomes in newly diagnosed IBD patients by enhancing remission rates, reducing disease activity and inflammatory burden, optimizing nutritional status, and decreasing complications. This intervention strategy may represent a valuable therapeutic approach for improving both short-term and long-term prognosis in IBD management.

早期营养干预对新诊断炎症性肠病患者临床缓解率和生活质量的影响
炎症性肠病(IBD)是一种受多种因素影响的慢性胃肠道疾病,包括遗传易感性、免疫失调、环境触发和营养状况。营养缺乏在IBD患者中很常见,可能导致疾病进展和不良临床结果。在这项研究中,我们研究了早期营养干预如何影响新诊断的IBD患者的临床缓解率、疾病活动性和生活质量。我们回顾性分析153例新诊断IBD患者的临床资料,将其分为两组:78例患者接受早期营养干预联合常规治疗(干预组),75例患者单独接受常规治疗(对照组)。在治疗4、8、12和24周后,我们评估了临床缓解率、疾病活动性指数(克罗恩病的CDAI和溃疡性结肠炎的Mayo评分)、生活质量评分(IBDQ)、炎症标志物、营养状况和疾病相关并发症。早期营养干预可提高临床缓解率,从8周开始持续到24周。疾病活动指数在干预组显示出进行性改善,克罗恩病患者的CDAI评分和溃疡性结肠炎患者的Mayo评分在24周评估中均显示出显著降低。干预组的生活质量得分显著提高,尤其是在12周和24周时间点。炎症标志物,包括c反应蛋白、红细胞沉降率和粪便钙保护蛋白,在接受营养干预的患者中表现出明显的下降。干预组的营养参数得到改善,血清白蛋白和前白蛋白水平恢复到正常范围。此外,在24周的随访期间,干预组患者的再住院率、肠外并发症和疾病复发率较低。这些研究结果表明,早期营养干预可通过提高缓解率、降低疾病活动性和炎症负担、优化营养状况和减少并发症,显著改善新诊断IBD患者的临床结果。这种干预策略可能是一种有价值的治疗方法,可以改善IBD治疗的短期和长期预后。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
6.20%
发文量
63
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology is an international medium publishing in English of original work in all branches of nutritional science, food science and vitaminology from any country. Manuscripts submitted for publication should be as concise as possible and must be based on the results of original research or of original interpretation of existing knowledge not previously published. Although data may have been reported, in part, in preliminary or abstract form, a full report of such research is unacceptable if it has been or will be submitted for consideration by another journal.
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