Effect of non-alcoholic beer, diet and exercise on endothelial function, nutrition and quality of life in patients with cirrhosis.
Study Goal
To evaluate the effect of non-alcoholic beer combined with diet and exercise on nutritional status, endothelial function, and quality of life in patients with cirrhosis.
Results Summary
The intervention group showed improvement in all measured nutritional parameters and more domains of quality of life compared to the control group, with no adverse events reported. Endothelial function improved in both groups, but the intervention group demonstrated broader benefits.
Population
Patients with cirrhosis (median MELD score 8, 88% Child-Pugh A, 60% women, mean age 53.5 ± 7.8 years).
Effective Dosage
330 mL non-alcoholic beer/day.
Duration
8 weeks.
Interactions
None mentioned.
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise | increase | nutritional status | patients with cirrhosis | - | improved | #1 |
non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise | increase | endothelial function | patients with cirrhosis | - | improved | #2 |
non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise | increase | quality of life | patients with cirrhosis | - | improved | #3 |
water + diet + exercise | increase | endothelial function | patients with cirrhosis | - | improved | #4 |
water + diet + exercise | increase | quality of life | patients with cirrhosis | - | improved | #5 |
non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise | no change | all biochemical parameters | patients with cirrhosis | - | remained stable | #6 |
water + diet + exercise | no change | all biochemical parameters | patients with cirrhosis | - | remained stable | #7 |
non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise | neutral | - | patients with cirrhosis | - | seems to be safe and well tolerated | #8 |
BACKGROUND: The implementation of nutritional strategies targeting several variables at once could benefit patients with cirrhosis. Non-alcoholic beer has different compounds that exert antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and nutritional properties. AIM: To evaluate the effect of diet + exercise and non-alcoholic beer on nutritional status, endothelial function and quality of life in patients with cirrhosis. METHODS: In this randomized open clinical trial, patients with cirrhosis were randomized into two groups: The intervention (non-alcoholic beer + diet + exercise) and control (water + diet + exercise) group. Treatment consisted of 330 mL non-alcoholic beer/day or the same amount of water, plus an individualized dietary plan and an exercise program with a pedometer-based bracelet to reach at least 5000 steps/d and > 2500 above the baseline during 8 wk. Endothelial function (flow-mediated dilation, plethysmography), biochemical and nutritional variables and quality of life (CLDQ) were evaluated. RESULTS: Forty-three patients were included in the study, 21 in the control group and 22 in the intervention group. The mean age was 53.5 ± 7.8 years, 60% were women, the median MELD score was 8 (7-10) and most patients were Child-Pugh A (88%). Adherence to the interventions was > 90% in both groups, there were no adverse events and all biochemical parameters remained stable in both groups. Endothelial function improved in both groups. All measured nutritional parameters improved in the intervention group, compared to only 2 in the control group and quality of life improved in both groups; however, more domains improved in the intervention group. CONCLUSION: The intervention consisting of non-alcoholic beer, diet and exercise seems to be safe and well tolerated in patients with cirrhosis, and shows improvement in nutritional status, endothelial function, and quality of life. These results need to be further confirmed.