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Can gut microbiota composition predict response to dietary treatments?

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Version 3 2024-06-18, 15:06
Version 2 2024-06-05, 08:35
Version 1 2019-06-14, 14:16
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-18, 15:06 authored by JR Biesiekierski, J Jalanka, Heidi StaudacherHeidi Staudacher
Dietary intervention is a challenge in clinical practice because of inter-individual variability in clinical response. Gut microbiota is mechanistically relevant for a number of disease states and consequently has been incorporated as a key variable in personalised nutrition models within the research context. This paper aims to review the evidence related to the predictive capacity of baseline microbiota for clinical response to dietary intervention in two specific health conditions, namely, obesity and irritable bowel syndrome (IBS). Clinical trials and larger predictive modelling studies were identified and critically evaluated. The findings reveal inconsistent evidence to support baseline microbiota as an accurate predictor of weight loss or glycaemic response in obesity, or as a predictor of symptom improvement in irritable bowel syndrome, in dietary intervention trials. Despite advancement in quantification methodologies, research in this area remains challenging and larger scale studies are needed until personalised nutrition is realistically achievable and can be translated to clinical practice.

History

Journal

Nutrients

Volume

11

Article number

ARTN 1134

Pagination

1 - 15

Location

Switzerland

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

2072-6643

eISSN

2072-6643

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, the authors

Issue

5

Publisher

MDPI