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A randomized controlled cross-over trial investigating the effect of anti-inflammatory diet on disease activity and quality of life in rheumatoid arthritis: the Anti-inflammatory Diet In Rheumatoid Arthritis (ADIRA) study protocol.

Nutrition journal
April 20, 2018
Anna Winkvist et al. (5 authors)
Clinical Trial ProtocolJournal ArticleResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to test whether an anti-inflammatory diet intervention could decrease disease activity and improve quality of life in patients with stable established rheumatoid arthritis (RA) compared to a regular diet.

Results Summary

The study is ongoing (ADIRA trial), but the abstract does not report specific results yet. It outlines the methodology for evaluating the diet's impact on disease severity, cardiovascular risk markers, and quality of life, with metabolomics used to predict responders.

Population

50 RA patients with moderate disease activity.

Effective Dosage

Not specified (food bags delivered weekly).

Duration

2 × 10 weeks with a 3-month wash-out between diets.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (5)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
anti-inflammatory diet intervention
decrease
disease activity
patients with stable established RA
-
decrease
#1
anti-inflammatory diet intervention
increase
quality of life
patients with stable established RA
-
improve
#2
dietary treatment of RA
decrease
disease activity
patients with RA
-
reduce
#3
dietary treatment of RA
increase
quality of life
patients with RA
-
improve
#4
dietary treatment of RA
decrease
individual and societal costs
patients with RA
-
reduce
#5
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic inflammatory disease that affects 0.5-1.0% of the population, and where many patients in spite of modern pharmacological treatment fail to reach remission. This affects physical as well as mental wellbeing and leads to severely reduced quality of life and reduced work capacity, thus yielding high individual as well as societal costs. As a complement to modern pharmacological treatment, lifestyle intervention should be evaluated as a treatment option. Scientific evidence exists for anti-inflammatory effects by single foods on RA, but no study exists where these foods have been combined to obtain maximum effect and thus offer a substantial improvement in patient life quality. The main goal of the randomized cross-over trial ADIRA (Anti-inflammatory Diet In Rheumatoid Arthritis) is to test the hypothesis that an anti-inflammatory diet intervention, compared to a regular diet, will decrease disease activity and improve quality of life in patients with stable established RA. METHODS: In total, 50 RA patients with moderate disease activity are randomized to receive initially either a portfolio diet based on several food items with suggested anti-inflammatory effects or a control diet during 2 × 10 weeks with 3 months wash-out between diets. Food bags are delivered weekly by a home food delivery chain and referred to as the fiber bag and the protein bag, respectively, to partially blind participants. Both groups continue with regular pharmacological treatment. Known food biomarkers will be analyzed to measure intervention compliance. Impact on disease severity (measured by DAS28, a composite score which predicts disability and progression of RA), risk markers for cardiovascular disease and quality of life are evaluated after each diet regimen. Metabolomics will be used to evaluate the potential to predict responders to dietary treatment. A health economic evaluation is also included. DISCUSSION: The nutritional status of patients with RA often is poor and many ask their physician for diet advice. No evidence-based dietary guidelines for patients with RA exist because of the paucity of well-conducted sufficiently large diet intervention trials. ADIRA is an efficacy study and will provide evidence as to whether dietary treatment of RA can reduce disease activity and improve quality of life as well as reduce individual and societal costs. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Registration Number: NCT02941055 .

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdolescentAdultAgedAnti-Inflammatory AgentsArthritis, RheumatoidCross-Over StudiesDietFast FoodsFemaleHumansMaleMetabolomicsMiddle AgedNutrientsNutrition PolicyPatient SelectionQuality of LifeRandomized Controlled Trials as TopicSwedenTreatment OutcomeYoung Adult
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations31
Citations/Year4.4
Relative Citation Ratio1.71
NIH Percentile69.7%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.75
Weight Score2.28
Normalized Score0.67
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