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Effect of Lifestyle Factors on Outcomes in Patients With Inflammatory Bowel Diseases.

The American journal of gastroenterology
June 1, 2020
Jacob J Rozich et al. (3 authors)
Journal ArticleResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the impact of mindfulness-based therapies, such as meditation and yoga, on clinical and endoscopic disease activity and overall quality of life in patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD).

Results Summary

The study found that mindfulness-based therapies did not consistently demonstrate benefits in clinical or endoscopic disease activity in IBD but may improve overall quality of life.

Population

Patients with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD).

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (17)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
Recreational exercise
decrease
flare and fatigue
patients with IBD
-
decreases the risk
#1
Obesity
increase
relapse
patients with IBD
-
increases the risk
#2
Obesity
increase
anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain
patients with IBD
-
is associated with higher
#3
Obesity
increase
health care utilization
patients with IBD
-
is associated with higher
#4
Obesity
neutral
pharmacokinetics of biologic agents
patients with IBD
-
modifies pharmacokinetics of biologic agents unfavorably
#5
Obesity
increase
treatment failure
patients with IBD
-
is associated with a higher risk
#6
Sleep disturbance
increase
relapse and chronic fatigue
patients with IBD
-
increases the risk
#7
Stress
increase
symptomatic flare
patients with IBD
-
may trigger
#8
Cigarette smoking
increase
corticosteroid dependence, surgery, and disease progression
patients with Crohn's disease
-
is associated with unfavorable outcomes including the risk
#9
Cigarette smoking
no change
outcomes
patients with ulcerative colitis
-
does not significantly impact
#10
Cigarette smoking
decrease
flare
patients with ulcerative colitis
-
may be associated with a lower risk
#11
Cannabis
decrease
chronic pain
patients with IBD
-
may decrease
#12
Cannabis
no change
biological remission
patients with IBD
-
without a significant effect
#13
structured exercise
no change
clinical and/or endoscopic disease activity
patients with IBD
-
have not consistently demonstrated benefit
#14
psychological therapy including mindfulness-based therapies such as meditation and yoga and gut-directed hypnotherapy
no change
clinical and/or endoscopic disease activity
patients with IBD
-
have not consistently demonstrated benefit
#15
structured exercise
increase
overall quality of life
patients with IBD
-
may improve
#16
psychological therapy including mindfulness-based therapies such as meditation and yoga and gut-directed hypnotherapy
increase
overall quality of life
patients with IBD
-
may improve
#17
Abstract

Various lifestyle factors including physical activity and obesity, stress, sleep, and smoking may modify the risk of developing inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs). In patients with established IBD, these lifestyle factors may significantly impact the natural history and clinical outcomes. Recreational exercise decreases the risk of flare and fatigue in patients with IBD. In contrast, obesity increases the risk of relapse and is associated with higher anxiety, depression, fatigue, and pain and higher health care utilization. Obesity also modifies pharmacokinetics of biologic agents unfavorably and is associated with a higher risk of treatment failure. Sleep disturbance is highly prevalent in patients with IBD, independent of disease activity, and increases the risk of relapse and chronic fatigue. Similarly, stress, particularly perceived stress rather than major life events, may trigger symptomatic flare in patients with IBD, although its impact on inflammation is unclear. Cigarette smoking is associated with unfavorable outcomes including the risk of corticosteroid dependence, surgery, and disease progression in patients with Crohn's disease; in contrast, smoking does not significantly impact outcomes in patients with ulcerative colitis, although some studies suggest that it may be associated with a lower risk of flare. The effect of alcohol and cannabis use in patients with IBD is inconsistent, with some studies suggesting that cannabis may decrease chronic pain in patients with IBD, without a significant effect of biological remission. Although these lifestyle factors are potentially modifiable, only a few interventional studies have been conducted. Trials of structured exercise and psychological therapy including mindfulness-based therapies such as meditation and yoga and gut-directed hypnotherapy have not consistently demonstrated benefit in clinical and/or endoscopic disease activity in IBD, although may improve overall quality of life.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Alcohol DrinkingAnxietyCigarette SmokingColitis, UlcerativeCrohn DiseaseDepressionDisease ProgressionExerciseFatigueHealth ServicesHumansHypnosisInflammatory Bowel DiseasesLife StyleMarijuana UseMeditationMindfulnessObesitySleep Wake DisordersYoga
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy50/10
Quality60/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations105
Citations/Year21.0
Relative Citation Ratio7.05
NIH Percentile96%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.31
Normalized Score0.52
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