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Evaluation of a Multimodal Stress Management and Comprehensive Lifestyle Modification Program on Quality of Life and Gastrointestinal Symptoms in Patients with Crohn's Disease: A Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial with 9-Month Follow-Up.

Authors :
Bauer, Nina
Löffler, Claudia
Oeznur, Oezlem
Uecker, Christine
Schlee, Christoph
Adamczyk, Alexandra
Elsenbruch, Sigrid
Pfuhlmann, Katrin
Reissmann, Ralf
Westendorf, Astrid
Keil, Thomas
Langhorst, Jost
Source :
Digestion; 2024, Vol. 105 Issue 3, p201-212, 12p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Introduction: Stress and lifestyle factors impact the course of Crohn's disease (CD). Our primary objective was to assess whether patients with CD benefit from a mind-body-medicine stress management and lifestyle modification (MBM) program. Methods: This 9-month two-arm pilot trial was conducted in Bamberg, Germany (2020–2021). Patients (18–75 years) with mild to moderate activity of CD and stable medication were enrolled and randomly assigned to either a 10-week MBM program (intervention group, IG) or a single 90-min education session (waiting list control group, CG). Primary endpoints were quality of life (IBDQ) and disease activity (HBI). Secondary endpoints were emotional distress, core self-evaluation, and inflammatory biomarkers 3 and 9 months after baseline assessment. Results: We analyzed data from 37 patients (IG: n = 19, mean ± SD age 49.6 ± 13.1 years, 68% female; CG: 18, 46.8 ± 11.4, 67% female). Immediately after the intervention, 79% (IG) and 44% (CG) experienced a clinically relevant improvement (IBDQ score ≥16 points). This was similar after 9 months (63% vs. 44%). There was no difference in disease activity (3 months: p = 0.082, 95% CI −1.3 to 2.6; 9 months: p = 0.251, 95% CI −1.2 to 2.5). Secondary outcomes indicated improvements in emotional distress, core self-evaluation, erythrocyte sedimentation rate after three and in emotional distress, T-cell profiling in the blood, and fecal lactoferrin and calprotectin group after 9 months in the IG. Conclusion: Our study suggested benefits of a multimodal stress management and lifestyle modification program for patients with CD. Larger trials are needed to determine if the program can supplement or at least partially replace pharmacological treatment approaches. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00122823
Volume :
105
Issue :
3
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Digestion
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177719937
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000536659