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Assessment and Educational Intervention to Reduce Ultra-processed Food Consumption in Pediatric Patients With IBD

Assessment and Educational Intervention to Reduce Ultra-processed Food Consumption in Pediatric Patients With IBD

Recruiting
10-21 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

This study explores whether simple nutrition education can help children and teens with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) eat fewer ultra-processed foods (UPFs). UPFs include packaged snacks, sugary drinks, and fast food-items that are high in added sugars, fats, and artificial ingredients. Participants will complete online food recalls to measure what they eat and will then receive either nutrition handouts alone or handouts plus a short educational video about UPFs. Researchers will compare changes in UPF intake between the two groups after several weeks and ask families how useful and acceptable they found the materials. The goal is to identify an effective, practical way to support healthier eating habits and long-term gut health in pediatric IBD.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Diagnosis of IBD (Crohn's disease, Ulcerative Colitis, IBD-U) for at least 3 months
  • Age 10 through \< 22 years at the time of enrollment (i.e., up to the day before the 22nd birthday)
  • Followed by a gastroenterologist at Connecticut Children's
  • IBD in clinical remission based on calculated PUCAI score \<10 or PCDAI score of \<10
  • Receiving medical infusions at CCMC Infusion Center as part of IBD treatment
  • Participants must be on full oral intake and not have major dietary restrictions or require oral nutrition supplements

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Following a medically prescribed or restrictive diet such as Crohn's Disease Exclusion Diet (CDED), ketogenic diet, Specific Carbohydrate Diet (SCD), low FODMAP diet, gluten-free diet, paleo, or Whole30.
  • Receiving any nutrition through feeding tubes (including nasogastric \[NG\], nasojejunal \[NJ\], gastrostomy \[G\], or gastrojejunostomy \[GJ\] tubes)
  • History of bowel surgery within 3 months of study start affecting ability to sustain normal enteral intake
  • Non-English-speaking participants (as translation and short-form consent processes will not be used for this study)

Study details
    IBD
    Crohn Disease (CD)
    Ulcerative Colitis (UC)
    Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
    Ultra Processed Food
    Nutrition Assessment
    DGBI

NCT07224113

Connecticut Children's Medical Center

1 February 2026

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