Ultra-processed food intake is associated with increased gastrointestinal tract symptoms and alterations in gut microbiota in patients with systemic sclerosis
Ju Young Lee, Swapna Mahurkar-Joshi, Arissa Young, Jennifer S. Labus, Bofei He, Ezinne Aja, Jonathan P. Jacobs, Elizabeth R. Volkmann

TL;DR
Eating more ultra-processed foods is linked to worse gut symptoms and changes in gut bacteria in people with systemic sclerosis.
Contribution
This study is the first to show a direct link between ultra-processed food intake and gut microbiome changes in systemic sclerosis patients.
Findings
Higher ultra-processed food intake was associated with increased gastrointestinal symptoms in systemic sclerosis patients.
Five bacterial species showed significant associations with ultra-processed food consumption.
Six bacterial species were linked to the severity of gastrointestinal symptoms after adjusting for other factors.
Abstract
Alterations in the gastrointestinal (GI) microbiome (i.e., dysbiosis) are a feature of systemic sclerosis (SSc). Diet is a known modifier of the GI microbiome, and ultra-processed food (UPF) consumption has been associated with adverse changes in GI microbial composition. This study aimed to determine whether UPF consumption affects the GI microbiota and GI symptoms in patients with SSc. Adult SSc patients provided stool samples and completed both the Diet History Questionnaire II (DHQ-2) and the UCLA Scleroderma Clinical Trial Consortium Gastrointestinal Tract Instrument (GIT 2.0). Shotgun metagenomics were performed using the Illumina NovaSeq 6000 with a target depth of 10 million 150x2 sequences per sample. UPF items (N=54) on the DHQ-2 were identified using the NOVA scale of food classification, and UPF intake was calculated as gram-per-week consumption according to patient…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Consumer Attitudes and Food Labeling · Nutrition, Health and Food Behavior
