Diet or medication in primary care patients with IBS: the DOMINO study - a randomised trial supported by the Belgian Health Care Knowledge Centre (KCE Trials Programme) and the Rome Foundation Research Institute ...

Background: In Europe, IBS is commonly treated with musculotropic spasmolytics (eg, otilonium bromide, OB). In tertiary care, a low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAP) diet provides significant improvement. Yet, dietary treatment remains to be explored in primary care. We evaluated the effect of a smartphone FODMAP-lowering diet application versus OB on symptoms in primary care IBS. Methods: IBS patients, recruited by primary care physicians, were randomised to 8 weeks of OB (40 mg three times a day) or diet and followed for 24 weeks. We compared I... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Carbone, Florencia
Van den Houte, Karen
Besard, Linde
Tack, Celine
Arts, Joris
Caenepeel, Philip
Piessevaux, Hubert
Vandenberghe, Alain
Matthys, Christophe
Biesiekierski, Jessica
Capiau, Luc
Ceulemans, Steven
Gernay, Olivier
Jones, Lydia
Maes, Sophie
Peetermans, Christian
Raat, Willem
Stubbe, Jeroen
Van Boxstael, Rudy
Vandeput, Olivia
Van Steenbergen, Sophie
Van Oudenhove, Lukas
Vanuytsel, Tim
Jones, Michael
Tack, Jan
Dokumenttyp: Journal contribution
Erscheinungsdatum: 2023
Verlag/Hrsg.: La Trobe
Schlagwörter: Clinical sciences / Nutrition and dietetics
Sprache: unknown
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-28883988
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : https://dx.doi.org/10.26181/23984046.v1

Background: In Europe, IBS is commonly treated with musculotropic spasmolytics (eg, otilonium bromide, OB). In tertiary care, a low fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols (FODMAP) diet provides significant improvement. Yet, dietary treatment remains to be explored in primary care. We evaluated the effect of a smartphone FODMAP-lowering diet application versus OB on symptoms in primary care IBS. Methods: IBS patients, recruited by primary care physicians, were randomised to 8 weeks of OB (40 mg three times a day) or diet and followed for 24 weeks. We compared IBS Symptom Severity Score and the proportion of responders (improvement ≥50 points) in all patients and the subgroup fulfilling Rome IV criteria (Rome+). We also evaluated treatment efficacy, quality of life, anxiety, depression, somatic symptom severity (Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ15, PHQ9)) and treatment adherence and analysed predictors of response. Results: 459 primary care IBS patients (41±15 years, 76% ...