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. 2021 Jun 3;9(6):668. doi: 10.3390/healthcare9060668

Table 1.

Characteristics of studies describing acne diet therapy.

n Type of Acne Type of Study Intervention/Measurement Duration Effect Year
[Reference]
66 moderate to severe AV randomised controlled trial -group 1: n = 34–participants with low GI and GL diet
-group 2: n = 32–participants with usual eating diet
2 weeks -IGF-1 concentrations significantly decreased among the group with low GI and GL diets and control group
-there were no significant differences in insulin, glucose, IGFBP-3 concentrations and insulin resistance
2018
[5]
168 mild to moderate AV randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial -group A (n = 82): capsules containing lactoferrin (100 mg), vitamin E (11 IU, as alpha-tocopherol), and zinc (5 mg, as zinc gluconate), capsule twice a day
-group B (n = 82): placebo, capsules containing starch, capsule twice a day
12 weeks -in the lactoferrin group, compared to the control: significant reduction in the total number of lesions (already after 2 weeks, with a maximum: at week 10), reduction in comedones and inflammatory changes (at week 10), sebum (improvement by week 12) 2017
[6]
160 nd case-control study with a randomised controlled trial n = 80 patients
n = 80 healthy controls
1st stage:
25 (OH) D deficiency in 48.8% of AV patients, but only 22.5% of healthy controls
2nd stage: supplementation of 1000 IU of cholecalciferol/day
2 months -deficiency of vitamin D was more frequent in patents with AV, oral vitamin D supplementation significantly improved AV inflammation 2016
[7]
48 nodular acne randomised controlled trial n = 24 patients received isotretinoin therapy (20–30 mg/day) and dietary supplement (gamma linolenic acid, vitamin E, vitamin C, beta-carotene, coenzyme Q10 and Vitis vitifera, twice a day)
n = 24 patients received only isotretinoin (20–30 mg/day)
6 months -patients using a dietary supplement with antioxidant properties had fewer side effects resulting from the use of isotretinoin, less redness and dryness and a better degree of hydration 2014
[8]
45 mild to moderate AV randomised controlled trial -group I: 2000 mg of eicosapentaenoic acid and docosahexaenoic acid)
-group II: borage oil containing 400 mg γ-linoleic acid),III: a control group
10 weeks -subjective assessment of improvement
-reduction in inflammation and non-inflammatory acne lesions
2014
[9]
45 mild to moderate AV prospective, randomised, open-label trial -group A: probiotic
-group B: minocycline
-group C: probiotic and minocycline
12 weeks -a significant improvement in the total number of lesions 4 weeks after the start of treatment in all groups
-after 8 and 12 weeks, group C had a significant decrease in the total number of lesions compared to groups A and B
2013
[10]
235 inflammatory AV multi-centre, open-label, prospective study -addition of 1 to 4 tablets
NicAzel (nicotinamide, azelaic acid, zinc, pyridoxine, copper, folic acid) to the current acne treatment regimen
8 weeks -visible reduction in inflammatory changes (88% of patients), and 81% of patients rated skin appearance as moderate or much better 2012
[11]
32 mild to moderate AV randomised, controlled trial n = 17–low-glycaemic-load diet
n = 15–control group
10 weeks -significant clinical improvement in the number of non-inflammatory and inflammatory AV lesions (in the low-glycaemic index group) 2012
[12]
43 mild to moderate exploratory study 100 mg of lactoferrin-enriched (80%) whey milk protein powder, twice a day 8 weeks -reduction in inflammatory lesions (20.2%), non-inflammatory lesions (23.5%) and total lesions (22.5%), reduction in total lesion count (76.9%) 2011
[13]
36 mild to moderate double-blind, placebo-controlled study n = 18–lactoferrin group (200 mg daily)
n = 18–placebo group
12 weeks -a significant reduction in acne severity (by 20.3%), number of inflammatory lesions (by 38.6%) and total lesions (by 23.1%) compared to the placebo group 2010
[14]
58 1 (mild), 2 (moderate), or 3 (severe) controlled clinical trial n = 23–low glycaemic index
n = 20–high glycaemic index
8 weeks -improvement in the appearance of the skin (but not statistically significant),
change in insulin sensitivity (but not statistically significant)
2010
[15]
31 mild to moderate AV dietary intervention trial n = 16, LGL group
n = 15–control group
12 weeks -increases in the ratio of saturated to monounsaturated fatty acids of skin surface triglycerides compared to controls 2008
[16]
43 mild to moderate randomised, investigator-masked, controlled trial n = 23–LGL group,
n = 20–control group
12 weeks -decrease in the total number of lesions, body weight, free androgen index and increase in insulin-like growth factor-1 binding protein compared to the control group 2007
[17]
43 mild to moderate non-randomised, parallel, controlled feeding trial n = 23, patients: LGL diet (25% energy from proteins, 45% energy from carbohydrates)
n = 20, control group: diet rich with carbohydrates, but without reference to the glycaemic index
12 weeks -decrease in the total number of lesions, decrease in body weight and body mass index, greater improvement in insulin sensitivity-compared to the control group 2007
[18]
82 severe AV, moderate AV unresponsive to conventional therapy, scarring AV, and AV causing psychological disorder investigator-blinded, randomised study group 1: isotretinoin (1 mg/kg/day)
group 2: isotretinoin (1 mg/kg/day) and vitamin E (800 IU/day)
16 weeks -vitamin E did not reduce the side effects associated with the use of isotretinoin 2005
[19]

GI—glycaemic index, GL—glycaemic load and LGL—low glycaemic load.