Silvester Jocelyn A, Weiten Dayna, Graff Lesley A, Walker John R, Duerksen Donald R
Faculty of Health Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; Celiac Research Program, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Nutrition Services, Grace General Hospital, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Nutrition. 2016 Jul-Aug;32(7-8):777-83. doi: 10.1016/j.nut.2016.01.021. Epub 2016 Feb 13.
To assess the relationship between self-reported adherence to a gluten-free diet (GFD) and the ability to determine correctly the appropriateness of particular foods in a GFD.
Persons with celiac disease were recruited through clinics and support groups. Participants completed a questionnaire with items related to GFD information sources, gluten content of 17 common foods (food to avoid, food allowed, and food to question), GFD adherence, and demographic characteristics. Diagnosis was self-reported.
The 82 respondents (88% female) had a median of 6 y GFD experience. Most (55%) reported strict adherence, 18% reported intentional gluten consumption and 21% acknowledged rare unintentional gluten consumption. Cookbooks, advocacy groups, and print media were the most commonly used GFD information sources (85-92%). No participant identified correctly the gluten content of all 17 foods; only 30% identified at least 14 foods correctly. The median score on the Gluten-Free Diet Knowledge Scale (GFD-KS) was 11.5 (interquartile ratio, 10-13). One in five incorrect responses put the respondent at risk of consuming gluten. GFD-KS scores did not correlate with self-reported adherence or GFD duration. Patient advocacy group members scored significantly higher on the GFD-KS than non-members (12.3 versus 10.6; P < 0.005).
Self-report measures which do not account for the possibility of unintentional gluten ingestion overestimate GFD adherence. Individuals who believe they are following a GFD are not readily able to correctly identify foods that are GF, which suggests ongoing gluten consumption may be occurring, even among patients who believe they are "strictly" adherent. The role of patient advocacy groups and education to improve outcomes through improved adherence to a GFD requires further research.
评估自我报告的无麸质饮食(GFD)依从性与正确判断特定食物是否适合GFD的能力之间的关系。
通过诊所和支持小组招募乳糜泻患者。参与者完成了一份问卷,内容涉及GFD信息来源、17种常见食物的麸质含量(应避免的食物、允许食用的食物和需质疑的食物)、GFD依从性和人口统计学特征。诊断由自我报告。
82名受访者(88%为女性)的GFD经验中位数为6年。大多数(55%)报告严格依从,18%报告有意摄入麸质,21%承认偶尔无意摄入麸质。食谱、倡导组织和印刷媒体是最常用的GFD信息来源(85%-92%)。没有参与者能正确识别所有17种食物的麸质含量;只有30%的人正确识别了至少14种食物。无麸质饮食知识量表(GFD-KS)的中位数分数为11.5(四分位间距,10-13)。五分之一的错误回答使受访者有摄入麸质的风险。GFD-KS分数与自我报告的依从性或GFD持续时间无关。患者倡导组织成员在GFD-KS上的得分显著高于非成员(12.3对10.6;P<0.005)。
未考虑无意摄入麸质可能性的自我报告措施高估了GFD依从性。认为自己遵循GFD的个体不能轻易正确识别无麸质食物,这表明即使在认为自己“严格”依从的患者中,也可能持续存在麸质摄入情况。患者倡导组织的作用以及通过改善GFD依从性来改善结果的教育需要进一步研究。