Diets alone are not therapy
In an accompanying editorial, Alexa N. Sasson, MD, an IBD fellow at Massachusetts General Hospital and T.H. Chan Harvard School of Public Health, both in Boston, called diet “a promising and potentially modifiable risk factor with mounting evidence supporting its therapeutic benefit.”
She concurred that the Israeli findings indicate that CDED with or without PEN appears effective for inducing and maintaining remission in this cohort of patients. “Assessment of composite diets such as the CDED is important since they can be incorporated into daily life. The relative efficacy of each of the included and excluded foods, however, is not clear,” she wrote.
She cautioned, however, that dietary therapy does not constitute maintenance therapy and its effects are not sustained after the reintroduction of whole foods. “Identification of sustainable dietary interventions for the prevention and treatment of IBD is increasingly a focus of research,” she wrote.
Dr. Sasson agreed that dietary therapy for CD should be centered on patient interests, goals, and disease states. “Adjunctive dietary measures might be considered in all interested patients as a method of improving gastrointestinal-related symptoms and quality of life, with the potential to achieve a higher and more sustained level of remission,” she wrote.
Both the authors and the commentator agreed on the need for larger randomized trials with long-term follow-up to guide treatment decisions and identify patients who might benefit from dietary intervention.
This study was funded by the Azrieli Foundation and Nestlé Health Science. Dr. Yanai reported financial relationships with Pfizer, AbbVie, Ferring, Janssen, Neopharm, Pfizer, and Takeda. Several coauthors disclosed financial ties to multiple private-sector companies. Dr. Sasson had no competing interests to declare.
This article was updated Dec. 1, 2021.