The effect of a low-nickel diet and nickel sensitization on gastroesophageal reflux disease: A pilot study.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the effect of a low-nickel diet on GERD symptoms and determine if nickel patch testing could predict diet responsiveness.
Results Summary
Nearly all participants (95%) reported reduced GERD symptoms after 8 weeks on a low-nickel diet, with significant declines in GERD-HRQL, regurgitation, and heartburn scores. Patch test results did not correlate with diet responsiveness.
Population
20 refractory GERD patients.
Effective Dosage
Not specified (low-nickel diet).
Duration
8 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
low-nickel diet | decrease | GERD symptoms | refractory GERD patients | - | reduced | #1 |
low-nickel diet | decrease | mean total GERD-HRQL scores | refractory GERD patients | 27.05 ± 16.04 | declined | #2 |
low-nickel diet | decrease | regurgitation scores | refractory GERD patients | 11.45 ± 6.46 | declined | #3 |
low-nickel diet | decrease | heartburn scores | refractory GERD patients | 10.85 ± 8.29 | declined | #4 |
low-nickel diet | decrease | GERD symptoms | refractory GERD patients | - | improves | #5 |
low-nickel diet | no change | responsiveness to a low-nickel diet | participants with positive vs. negative patch testing to nickel | - | responded equivalently | #6 |
epicutaneous patch testing to nickel | no change | responsiveness to a low-nickel diet | refractory GERD patients | - | does not correlate | #7 |
BACKGROUND/AIMS: Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) is a common medical condition, frequently refractory to medical therapy. Nickel is a leading cause of allergic contact dermatitis. Although nickel is widely found in foods, the effect of nickel on GERD is unknown. This pilot study sought to evaluate the effect of a low-nickel diet on GERD and determine if epicutaneous patch testing to nickel could predict responsiveness to a low-nickel diet. METHODS: This prospective, single-site pilot study recruited 20 refractory GERD patients as determined by GERD Health-Related Quality of Life (GERD-HRQL) scores. All patients had epicutaneous patch testing for nickel and were then instructed to follow a low-nickel diet for 8 weeks regardless of patch test results. GERD-HRQL was recorded at baseline and following 8 weeks of a low-nickel diet. Demographic and clinical data associated with GERD and nickel allergy were recorded. A Wilcoxon signed-rank test and nonparametric analysis of longitudinal data were run to determine statistical significance in pre- and post- GERD-HRQL scores in nickel patch test-positive and negative groups. RESULTS: Nearly all (19/20 [95%]) participants reported reduced GERD symptoms after 8 weeks on a low-nickel diet. Mean total GERD-HRQL, regurgitation, and heartburn scores declined (27.05 ± 16.04, 11.45 ± 6.46, 10.85 ± 8.29). Participants with positive vs. negative patch testing to nickel responded equivalently to a low-nickel diet. CONCLUSIONS: A low-nickel diet improves GERD symptoms, but responsiveness to a low-nickel diet does not correlate with epicutaneous patch testing to nickel. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov number: NCT03720756.