Description Module

Description Module

The Description Module contains narrative descriptions of the clinical trial, including a brief summary and detailed description. These descriptions provide important information about the study's purpose, methodology, and key details in language accessible to both researchers and the general public.

Description Module path is as follows:

Study -> Protocol Section -> Description Module

Description Module


Ignite Creation Date: 2025-12-25 @ 12:36 AM
Ignite Modification Date: 2025-12-25 @ 12:36 AM
NCT ID: NCT04913467
Brief Summary: This study will evaluate if the Groningen Anti-Inflammatory Diet and the ileocolonic delivery of vitamin B2, B3 and C can positively influence the course of Crohn's disease and can positively alter the gut microbiome of Crohn's disease patients as well as healthy volunteers.
Detailed Description: It is becoming increasingly more well known that diet and the microbiome have a pivotal role in the development and course of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). Strict exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) can induce remission in Crohn's Disease (CD) and is the standard treatment in paediatric CD. Implementing a restrictive diet in adults is difficult; adult patients do not tend to adhere to EEN. Recently, the CD-exclusion diet (CDED) combined with partial enteral nutrition demonstrated to be effective in CD-patients with flares. Additionally, accumulating evidence suggests that intake of vitamins can influence disease course, mainly by beneficially modulating the gut microbiota and gut redox potential, especially if the vitamins can be delivered to the colon. Nevertheless, no dietary guidelines are available to physicians and patients. Due to complaints of certain foods and patients' eagerness to postpone new flares, patients start experimenting with their food. As patients with CD are already often malnourished, this poorly substantiated experimenting puts them even more at risk for malnutrition and could have a potential negative effect on their disease outcomes. Next, quality of life of patients decreases and healthcare costs will rise. Therefore, both patients and physicians are in desperate need of evidence for an anti-inflammatory dietary advice in CD. As compliance to a diet increases when they are supported by family members, their household members will also be asked to participate in the study. Simultaneously studying their healthy family members will also provide information of the effect of this anti-inflammatory diet or intake of lieocolonic-delivered vitamins on their microbiome and markers of inflammation and oxidative stress.
Study: NCT04913467
Study Brief:
Protocol Section: NCT04913467