# The Association Between Plant-Based Diet and Gallstone Disease: A Case-Control Study

**Authors:** Mohammad Hossein Ebrahimizadeh, Ava Kheirizadeh, Azita Hekmatdoost, Moloud Ghorbani, Amir Sadeghi, Zahra Yari

PMC · DOI: 10.34172/mejdd.2025.430 · Middle East Journal of Digestive Diseases · 2025-07-30

## TL;DR

A healthy plant-based diet may lower the risk of gallstone disease, while an unhealthy plant-based diet may increase it.

## Contribution

This study demonstrates that diet quality within plant-based eating significantly affects gallstone disease risk.

## Key findings

- A healthful plant-based diet reduced gallstone disease risk by up to 67% after adjusting for confounders.
- An unhealthy plant-based diet increased gallstone disease risk by up to 2.2-fold.
- Higher adherence to a healthful plant-based diet was inversely associated with gallstone disease.

## Abstract

Recent studies have emphasized the role of plant-based diets in reducing the risk of gallstone disease (GD) by reducing oxidative stress and inflammation. This study aimed to investigate the association between plant-based diet indices and GD risk.

189 patients with newly diagnosed GD and 342 healthy controls participated in this case-control study. To assess overall adherence to a plant-based diet, three indices were calculated based on dietary data from the food frequency questionnaire: the plant-based dietary index (PDI), the healthful PDI (hPDI), and the unhealthful PDI (uhPDI). The association between plant-based diet indices and the risk of GD was assessed using logistic regression models.

A significant and inverse association was observed between PDI and the risk of GD, with an odds reduction of 48% in the crude model, 56% when adjusted for age and sex, and 59% when adjusted for additional confounders. Similar results were obtained for hPDI. Increasing the hPDI was associated with a 53% (in the crude model) to 67% (in the full adjusted model) reduction in the odds of GD. While increasing uhPDI was associated with an increased odds of GD. In the crude model, the highest uhPDI score increased the odds of the disease by 70%, and in the final model, the increase in odds reached 2.2-fold.

Our study revealed that a healthy plant-based diet is associated with a reduced risk of GD, whereas an unhealthy plant-based diet may contribute to a greater susceptibility to disease, emphasizing the importance of diet quality in plant-based nutritional approaches. Further studies are needed to confirm these findings.

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** CCK (cholecystokinin) [NCBI Gene 885], mucin [NCBI Gene 100508689], PADI1 (peptidyl arginine deiminase 1) [NCBI Gene 29943] {aka HPAD10, PAD1, PDI, PDI1}
- **Diseases:** weight loss (MESH:D015431), hepatobiliary condition (MESH:D004066), insulin resistance (MESH:D007333), GS (MESH:D005736), malignancies (MESH:D009369), common bile duct (CBD) stones (MESH:D042882), diabetes (MESH:D003920), Inflammation (MESH:D007249), Liver Diseases (MESH:D008107), conditions (MESH:D020763), metabolic syndrome (MESH:D024821), gallbladder stasis (MESH:D005705), chronic diseases (MESH:D002908), metabolic dysfunction (MESH:D008659), GD (MESH:D002769), hPDI (MESH:D010939), obesity (MESH:D009765), autoimmune conditions (MESH:D001327)
- **Chemicals:** starch (MESH:D013213), carbohydrates (MESH:D002241), fat (MESH:D005223), LDL-C (-), bile acid (MESH:D001647), cholesterol (MESH:D002784), alcohol (MESH:D000438), sterol (MESH:D013261), polyphenols (MESH:D059808)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

_Full body text omitted from this summary view._ Fetch the complete paper as Markdown: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12958317/full.md

## References

30 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12958317/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12958317