Copyright
©The Author(s) 2016.
World J Gastroenterol. Jul 21, 2016; 22(27): 6296-6317
Published online Jul 21, 2016. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i27.6296
Published online Jul 21, 2016. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v22.i27.6296
Ref. | Disease onset (Incident CD) | Disease progression | Study populationand design | Intervention and comparison group | Outcome |
Lifestyle | |||||
Smoking[11,13] (LOE 2b, 2a) | ↑ | ↑ | Cohort study current smokers with CD (n = 474)[17] (LOE 2b) | Smoking cessation counselling | Decreased risk of flares, need for surgery and immunosuppressive therapy[17] |
Cohort study current smokers with CD (n = 408)[18] (LOE 2b) | Quitters vs non-quitters | Continuing smokers had more disease relapses, and patients who quit smoking had similar relapse incidence compared with non-smokers[18] | |||
Sleep[177,178] (LOE 2b) | No data | ↑ | None | None | No data |
Stress[158,159] (LOE 2b) | No data | ↑? | Adult and adolescent patients with IBD Systematic review of RCTs and quasi-RCTs (n = 1745)[162] (LOE 1a) | Multi-modality psychotherapy | No evidence for efficacy of psychological therapy in adult patients with IBD In adolescents, psychological interventions may be beneficial, but the evidence is limited |
Diet | |||||
Dietary fat[118] (LOE 3a) | n-6 PUFA↑ | ↓ | CD in remission Systematic review of RCTs (n = 1039)[201] (LOE 1a) | Fish oil n-3 (PUFA) or placebo | Non-significant trend towards lower risk of relapse at 1 yr in fish oil group compared with placebo |
n-3 PUFA↓ | |||||
Dietary protein[118,120] (LOE 3a, 2b) | Animal protein( meat and fish)↑ | ↔? | Mild- moderate CD | Restricted diet ( red meat + spelt bread) or control diet (low-fiber, low-fat, and high-carbohydrate ) | Radiologic and endoscopic improvement in restricted diet group (interpret with caution; small study with limited generalizability) |
Vegetable and diary↓ | RCT (n = 18)[197] (LOE 2b) | ||||
Dietary fiber[118,120] (LOE 3a, 2b) | Fruit and vegetable fiber↓ | ↓ | Inactive or mildly active CD, RCT (n = 352)[207] (LOE 1b) | High fiber diet vs low fiber | No difference in disease activity, surgery or hospitalizations |
Food additives [Microparticles (MP)[130,131] (LOE 5)] | High MP-diet↑ | High-MP diet↑ | Active CD RCT (n = 20)[203] (LOE 1b) RCT(n = 83)[202] (LOE 1b) | Low -MP-diet vs control diet | Decrease in CDAI in smaller trial[203] |
No difference in larger trial[202] | |||||
Fruits and vegetables[118] (LOE 3a) | ↓ | ↓? | CD in remission | Semi-vegetarian diet or omnivorous diet | Maintenance of remission rates higher on semi-vegetarian diet compared to omnivorous diet |
RCT (n = 22)[198] (LOE 1b) | |||||
Food antigens[128] (LOE 4) | No data | ↑ | Active and inactive CD RCT (n = 40)[129] (LOE 2b) Active CD Systematic review RCTs (n = 334)[210] (LOE 1a) | Elimination diet based on IgG positivity to cheese and yeast or sham diet | Daily stool frequency significantly decreased by 11% during a specific diet compared with a sham diet. Abdominal pain reduced and general well-being improved[129] |
Elemental vs non-elemental diet | No difference in the efficacy between elemental and non-elemental diet[210] | ||||
Enteral nutrition | No data | ↔ | Active CD Systematic review (n = 192)[210] (LOE 1a) | Enteral nutrition vs corticosteroids | Enteral nutrition less effective than corticosteroids for induction of remission |
Breastfeeding[187-189] (LOE 3a, 3b, 2b) | ↔ | No data | None | None | No data |
Pharmacologic agents | |||||
Nsaids[139-140] (LOE2b) | ↑? | ↑ | Inactive IBD with arthralgia. | Rofecoxib 25 mg or 12.5 mg x 20 d | 41% responded with reduction in arthralgia scores. P < 0.05. No IBD flares |
Open label trial (n = 32)[144] (LOE 2b) | 9% developed GI side effects | ||||
Oral contraceptives[150,151,153,155] (LOE 3a, 2b) | ↔ | ↔ | None | None | No data |
Antibiotics[145-147] (LOE 3b, 3a) | Early exposure↑ | ↓ | Active CD Systematic review of RCTs (n = 1160)[71] (LOE 1a-) | Antibiotic or placebo | Antibiotics superior to placebo at inducing remission |
Vaccination[183] (LOE 3a) | No effect | No effect | None | None | None |
Gut microbiome | |||||
Dysbiosis[80-82] (LOE 4) | ↑ | ↑ | Mild-moderate CD Systematic review of RCTs (n = 746)[199] (LOE 1a) | Probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics or placebo | Insufficient data to recommend probiotics for use in CD |
Ecological (Abiotic) | |||||
Air pollution[33,34] (LOE 2c, 3b) | ↑ | ↑? | None | None | No data |
Water pollution[36-38] (LOE 5) | ↑? | ↑? | None | None | No data |
Low Vitamin D[42,44,57,59] (LOE 2b, 3a, 2b) | ↑ | ↑ | CD in remission RCT (n = 94)[51] (LOE 1a) | Vitamin D3 or placebo | Lower relapse rates in patients randomized to vitamin D3 1200 IU/d[51] |
Mild-moderate CD Cohort study (n = 18)[60] (LOE 2b) | No comparison group | 24 wk of vitamin D3 (up to 5000 IU/d) reduced mean CDAI scores by 112 ± 81 points from 230 ± 74 to 118 ± 66 (P < 0.0001). Quality-of-life scores also improved following vitamin D supplementation[60] | |||
Surgery | |||||
Appendectomy[192,193] (LOE 3b, 3a) | ↔ | No data | None | None | No data |
- Citation: Abegunde AT, Muhammad BH, Bhatti O, Ali T. Environmental risk factors for inflammatory bowel diseases: Evidence based literature review. World J Gastroenterol 2016; 22(27): 6296-6317
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/1007-9327/full/v22/i27/6296.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.3748/wjg.v22.i27.6296