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The impact of diet and ethnicity on gut microbiota variation in irritable bowel syndrome: A multi-center study.

Xin-Hui Khoo, Chun-Wie Chong, Abdul Malik Talha, Koshy Philip, Cindy Shuan-Ju Teh et al.
Other Journal of gastroenterology and hepatology 2023 11 인용
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

연구 유형
Observational Study
표본 크기
15
대상 집단
Ibs was conducted in two phases: (i) an initial cross-sectional gut mi
기간
6 weeks
중재
The impact of diet and ethnicity on gut microbiota variation in irritable bowel syndrome: A multi-center study. 44.1%
대조군
healthy controls
일차 결과
IBS symptom improvement
효과 방향
Positive
비뚤림 위험
Moderate

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIM: The gut microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is known to vary with diet. We aim to (i) analyze the gut microbiota composition of IBS patients from a multi-ethnic population and (ii) explore the impact of a low FODMAP diet on gastrointestinal symptoms and gut microbiota composition among IBS patients. METHODS: A multi-center study of multi-ethnic Asian patients with IBS was conducted in two phases: (i) an initial cross-sectional gut microbiota composition study of IBS patients and healthy controls, followed by (ii) a single-arm 6-week dietary interventional study of the IBS patients alone, exploring clinical and gut microbiota changes. RESULTS: A total of 34 adult IBS patients (IBS sub-types of IBS-D 44.1%, IBS-C 32.4%, and IBS-M 23.5%) and 15 healthy controls were recruited. A greater abundance of Parabacteroides species with lower levels of bacterial fermenters and short-chain fatty acids producers were found among IBS patients compared with healthy controls. Age and ethnicity were found to be associated with gut microbiota composition. Following a low FODMAP dietary intervention, symptom and quality of life improvement were observed in 24 (70.6%) IBS patients. Symptom improvement was associated with adherence to the low FODMAP diet (46.7% poor adherence vs 92.9% good adherence, P = 0.014), and gut microbiota patterns, particularly with a greater abundance of Bifidobacterium longum, Anaerotignum propionicum, and Blautia species post-intervention. CONCLUSION: Gut microbiota variation in multi-ethnic IBS patients may be related to dietary intake and may be helpful to identify patients who are likely to respond to a low FODMAP diet.

요약

The gut microbiota in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is known to vary with diet, and the impact of a low FODMAP diet on gastrointestinal symptoms and gut microbiota composition among IBS patients is explored.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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