Rationale and design of a randomized placebo-controlled nutritional trial embracing a citizen science approach

Marieke van de Put, Maartje van den Belt, Nicole de Wit, Remco Kort*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Modulation of the gut microbiota through specific dietary interventions shows potential for maintenance and optimization of health. A dietary fiber diet and fermented foods diet appear to alter the gut microbiota, but evidence is limited. Therefore, we designed the Gut Health Enhancement by Eating Favorable Food study, a 21-week randomized controlled trial studying effects of dietary fibers and fermented foods on gut microbiota diversity and composition, while also stimulating dietary behavior changes through a citizen science (CS) approach. We hypothesized that a high-fermented food diet would increase microbial diversity, whereas a high-dietary fiber diet would stimulate the growth of specific fiber-degrading bacteria. The following elements of CS were adopted: education on the gut microbiota, tailored dietary intervention, remote data collection by participants, sharing of personal gut microbiota outcomes with participants, and vlogs by participants for dissemination of results. Here we describe the study protocol and report the flow of participants, baseline characteristics, and compliance rates. Completed in March 2024, the trial included 147 healthy adults randomized to a high-dietary fiber intervention, high-fermented food intervention, or control group. Each group received an additional study product after 2 weeks: dried chicory root, a fermented beverage, or maltodextrin (placebo). A 3-month follow-up assessed the participants’ ability to sustain dietary changes. The recruitment of participants was successful, reflected by 1448 applications. The compliance with the dietary guidelines and study products was >90%. This study shows that including elements of CS in an randomized controlled trial is feasible and may help recruitment and compliance.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)96-110
Number of pages15
JournalNutrition Research
Volume131
Early online date27 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2024

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)

Funding

The authors acknowledge the valuable collaboration with Bouwens, M. Copini, AJ. and Rook, M. from the Dutch Digestive Foundation; Pintar, N. Hlap\u010Di\u0107, I. and Balen, B. from Ani Biome; van Straaten, J. P. and Voragen, F. from Keep Food Simple; Kaper, F. Rijnaarts, I. and Borkent, J. from WholeFiber Holding BV; van Eeden, F. and Seegers, J. from MyMicroZoo and Levin, E. from HORAIZON. The authors gratefully acknowledge the anonymous reviewers for their valuable suggestions. The graphical abstract was created with BioRender.com. The project Gut Health Enhancement by Eating Favorable Food (the GEEF study) was funded by the Dutch Digestive Foundation (Maag Lever Darm Stichting), Amersfoort, The Netherlands WOO 22-03 grant; Ani Biome; Keep Food Simple and WholeFiber Holding BV. The study sponsors had no role in the planning, design, data collection, analysis, or interpretation, except for the Dutch Digestive Foundation, which developed the recipe booklets with the dietary guidelines for the RCT. The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

FundersFunder number
Ani Biome
HORAIZON
Eating Favorable Food
Maag Lever Darm Stichting
Keep Food Simple
WholeFiber Holding BV

    Keywords

    • Behavior change
    • Dietary fiber
    • Fermented food
    • Gut microbiota
    • Tailored diet

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