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Not Yet RecruitingNCT07344428

Efficacy and Safety of CDED With Anti-TNF-α Biologics in Crohn's Disease: A Randomized Trial

Therapeutic Effect of Exclusion Diet Combined With Anti-TNF-α Biologics in Adult Patients With Crohn's Disease in China: A Single-center, Prospective, Randomized, Controlled Trial

Status
Not Yet Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
185 (estimated)
Sponsor
Sixth Affiliated Hospital, Sun Yat-sen University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic inflammatory bowel disease with high recurrence and surgical rates. Mucosal healing is a key therapeutic goal, yet current anti-TNF-α biologics achieve only about 30% mucosal healing. Dietary intervention, particularly the Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED), shows promise in CD management. Preliminary data suggest that combining CDED with anti-TNF-α biologics may significantly improve mucosal healing rates (42.9% vs 25%). This single-center, prospective, randomized, controlled trial will enroll 185 adult CD patients with active disease (SES-CD ≥3), randomly assigned 1:1 to receive either anti-TNF-α biologics plus CDED or anti-TNF-α biologics alone. The primary endpoint is mucosal healing rate at week 14 (SES-CD=0). Secondary endpoints include clinical remission, endoscopic response, transmural healing, and adverse events. This study aims to provide high-quality evidence for the efficacy and safety of this combined approach in Chinese CD patients.

Detailed description

Crohn's disease (CD) is a chronic granulomatous inflammatory disease that can affect the entire digestive tract, characterized by a protracted course and complex complications. Although the advent of biologics has significantly improved CD treatment outcomes, real-world data show that only about 30% of patients achieve mucosal healing with anti-TNF-α biologics (infliximab or adalimumab), representing a major therapeutic bottleneck. According to the international STRIDE-II consensus, mucosal healing is a key target in CD treat-to-target strategy and is closely associated with better long-term prognosis. In recent years, the role of dietary factors in CD management has gained increasing attention. Exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN) has demonstrated efficacy in inducing remission and mucosal healing in pediatric CD, but poor long-term adherence limits its application in adults. Based on this, oral dietary regimens mimicking EEN components (such as the Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet, CDED) have become a new research focus. Preliminary data from our research team showed that compared to anti-TNF-α biologics alone, CDED combined with anti-TNF-α biologics resulted in significantly higher mucosal healing rates (42.9% vs 25.0%) and greater improvement in SES-CD scores at week 14, providing strong preliminary evidence for this combined approach to overcome the efficacy bottleneck.This is a single-center, prospective, randomized, open-label, controlled clinical trial conducted at the Inflammatory Bowel Disease Center, Department of Gastroenterology, Sixth Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University. A total of 185 eligible adult Chinese patients with active CD will be enrolled and randomly assigned in a 1:1 ratio using SAS-generated random sequences with sealed envelope allocation concealment. The intervention group will receive standardized anti-TNF-α biologic therapy (infliximab 5mg/kg IV at weeks 0, 2, 6, and 14, or adalimumab subcutaneous injection at standard doses) combined with strict CDED. The dietary protocol includes detailed electronic and paper recipes specifying allowed grains (rice only), vegetables (avoiding nightshades), fruits, meats (recommended fish and poultry, limited red meat), oils (olive oil, coconut oil), and cooking methods (steaming, boiling, blanching), while strictly prohibiting ultra-processed foods, nuts, legumes, and butter. Patients will maintain daily food diaries via WeChat group and shared documents, with frequent supervision and guidance from researchers. The control group will receive the same anti-TNF-α biologic therapy alone without dietary intervention. The primary endpoint is mucosal healing rate at week 14 (defined as SES-CD score=0). Secondary endpoints include clinical remission rate (CDAI\<150), endoscopic response rate (≥50% reduction in SES-CD), transmural healing rate (assessed by intestinal ultrasound), and adverse event incidence. Sample size calculation is based on preliminary data with superiority test assumption and 20% dropout rate. Data analysis will follow intention-to-treat (ITT) principle using SPSS 25.0 software.This study is innovative as it is the first in China to use a rigorous randomized controlled trial design to validate whether a specific, easily implementable, and cost-effective dietary intervention (CDED) can synergistically enhance the efficacy of standard biologic therapy, aiming to overcome the limitation of suboptimal mucosal healing rates with biologics alone. The findings are expected to provide high-level evidence for long-term dietary management in CD patients, forming a dietary intervention guidance program with Chinese characteristics, thereby improving patient outcomes and reducing healthcare burden.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERCrohn's Disease Exclusion DietParticipants will receive anti-TNF-α biologics (infliximab 5mg/kg IV at weeks 0, 2, 6, and 14, or adalimumab subcutaneous injection at standard doses) combined with the Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED). The CDED protocol includes detailed dietary guidance specifying allowed foods (rice, certain vegetables and fruits, fish, poultry, olive oil) and prohibited items (ultra-processed foods, nuts, legumes, butter). Patients will maintain daily food diaries and receive frequent supervision and guidance from researchers to ensure dietary compliance throughout the 14-week study period. This combined intervention aims to evaluate whether CDED can synergistically enhance the efficacy of standard biologic therapy in achieving mucosal healing in Crohn's disease patients.

Timeline

Start date
2026-02-01
Primary completion
2028-02-01
Completion
2028-02-01
First posted
2026-01-15
Last updated
2026-01-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: China

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT07344428. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.