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. 2020 Nov 27;12(12):3648. doi: 10.3390/nu12123648

Table 1.

Characteristics of the included randomized controlled trials investigating the efficacy of low FODMAP diets in patients with IBD and FGS.

First Author: Bodini [26] Cox [24,25] Halmos [23] Pedersen [27,28,29]
Publication: Nutrition 2019 Gastroenterology 2020;
J. Crohns Colitis 2018
Clin. Transl. Gastroenterol. 2017 World J. Gastroenterol. 2017; Dan. Med. J. 2015; J. Crohns Colitis 2014
Publication type: Full-text (n = 1) Full-text (n = 1) and poster abstract (n = 1) Full-text (n = 1) Full-text (n = 2) and poster abstract (n = 1)
Study duration: NR 2016–2017 2009–2011 2012–2013
Origin: Italy UK Australia Denmark
Registry: - ISRCTN17061468 ACTRN12612001185853 -
Funding: NR Kenneth Rainin Fndn National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia, Eva and Les Erdi Fndn, Monash University NR
Ethical permission: NR London Dulwich Eastern Health and Monash University Human Research and Ethics Committees Ethics Committee of Science, Denmark
RCT Design: Parallel Parallel Cross-over Parallel
Randomization: PC-generated sequence Block, with a 1:1 ratio, stratified by diagnosis (CD/UC) and fCAL at screening PC-generated order A person not involved in the study generated the random sequence and numbered the envelopes
Masking: Single-blind (clinician) Single-blind (patients). The terms “fermentable carbohydrates”, “low FODMAP diet”, or the diet’s mechanisms were not mentioned to participants Double-blind (?) § Open-label
Multicenter: - - -
Recruitment site: Ospedale Policlinico San Martino—IRCCS per l’Oncologia, Genoa Two large gastroenterology clinics in London Gastroenterology clinics and the internet Tertiary hospital in Copenhagen
Participants: N = 55 IBD-IBS patients on remission or with mild disease activity (PMS < 6 or HBi < 8) N = 52 quiescent * IBD patients with FGD (IBS-D, IBS-M, IBS-U, FB, or FD), LFD naïve N = 9 quiescent œ CD patients with FGS N = 89 IBD patients with FGS in remission, or mild-to-moderate disease
Ethnicity: NR NR NR
CD/UC (n): 35/20 26/26 9/0 28/61
Criteria for IBS: Rome IV [31] Rome III [32] Rome III [32] š Rome III [32]
IBD Diagnostic criteria: endoscopic, radiologic, and histologic evaluation NR NR NR
Participant age: 45 (20–75) years ≥18 years 35 (29–41) ƒ years 40 (20–70) years
Intervention arm: n = 26 n = 27 n = 9 n = 44
Control arm: n = 29 n = 25 n = 9 n = 45
Inclusion criteria:
Exclusion criteria:
HLA-DQ2/DQ8: NR NR All patients were negative NR

CD, Crohn’s disease; CRP, C-reactive protein; fCAL, fecal calprotectin; FB, functional bloating; FD, functional diarrhea; FGD, functional gastrointestinal disorders; FGS, functional gastrointestinal symptoms; Fndn, Foundation; FODMAP, Fermentable Oligo-, Di-, Monosaccharides, and Polyols; GI, gastrointestinal; HBi, Harvey Bradshaw Index for CD [33]; IBD, inflammatory bowel diseases; IBD-Q, inflammatory bowel disease—Quality of Life [34,35]; IBS, irritable bowel syndrome; IBS-D, diarrhea-predominant IBS; IBS-M, mixed IBS subtype; IBS-U, unsubtyped IBS; IRCCS, Institute for Research, Hospitalization and Health Care; LFD, Low FODMAP diet; NR, not reported; PC, personal computer; PGA, Physician Global Assessment; PMS, Partial Mayo Score for UC [36]; UC, ulcerative colitis. √ included in the study; * Defined by PGA, stable medications, no IBD flare in the previous 6 months, fCAL < 250 µg/g, and serum CRP < 10 mg/L; œ Defined by HBi < 5; Median, range; ƒ Median, interquartile range; § Masking was reported as double-blind through a reference to a previous protocol [30], however (a) participants did not match between the two publications [23,30], and (b) in the latter publication [23], blinding of investigators was not reported in the manuscript text; š No information on IBS/FGS was provided in the manuscript presenting the RCT’s results [23]. A reference to a previous publication [30] is provided for more information concerning the sample; however, a mismatch in the sample is evident, as in the first reference, participants included IBS patients only [30], excluding all with diagnosed IBD, whereas in the latter publication [23], IBD was the primary inclusion criterion.