Abstract

Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is a chronic allergic disease defined by a marked eosinophilic inflammation and symptoms of esophageal dysfunction. EoE is a heterogeneous disease and severely impacts the quality of life of affected patients. The current therapeutic management of EoE is based on two cornerstones: medication and diet therapy, both effective but limited by several critical issues. The choice of one or the other therapy might depend on the different disease phenotypes (allergic vs. non-allergic, inflammatory vs. fibro-stenotic), patient's age (adult vs. childhood-onset), food habits, patient/family preference, and familiar financial resource. Diet therapy is a successful treatment but limited by low patient adherence, the need for several endoscopies, food restrictions, psychosocial impact, and potential nutritional deficiencies. All these limitations could be effectively overcome with multidisciplinary and personalized management. This review summarizes the most recent evidence on the dietary elimination approaches and will provide a practical guide to clinicians in managing and implementing dietary therapy for patients with EoE.

Highlights

  • Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is the most characterized eosinophilic gastrointestinal disorder (EGID) and is a chronic/remittent allergic disease, defined by a marked eosinophilic inflammation and symptoms of esophageal dysfunction [1, 2]

  • This review summarizes the most recent evidence on the dietary elimination approaches and will provide a practical guide to clinicians in managing and implementing dietary therapy for patients with EoE

  • 36% of the EoE cohort (EoEe3) presented an adult-onset and structuring disease [16, 21]. According to this endotype classification, patients with the EoEe1 endotype might successfully be treated with diet and steroid therapy, and children with the EoEe2 endotype might benefit from the anti-type 2 (T2) immune agents [22]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Eosinophilic esophagitis (EoE) is the most characterized eosinophilic gastrointestinal disorder (EGID) and is a chronic/remittent allergic disease, defined by a marked eosinophilic inflammation and symptoms of esophageal dysfunction [1, 2]. In the last 20 years, several epidemiological studies showed a significant increase in the epidemiology of EGIDs, partially related to improved medical awareness and knowledge through modern diagnostic instruments [4,5,6]. It was postulated that changes in environmental factors may have contributed to the significant increase in EoE epidemiology [7]. Navarro et al found that the pooled prevalence of EoE is 34.4 cases/100,000 inhabitants and is higher for adults than for children (42.2/100,000 vs 34/100,000) [5]. The pooled incidence rate was 6.6/100,000 people per year in children and 7.7/100,000 in adults [5]

Diet Therapy in Eosinophilic Esophagitis
HETEROGENEITY OF EOE
HOW TO MANAGE EOE
Results
Prescribing a Diet Therapy
Elemental Diet
Food Elimination Diets
Biochemical assessment
Compliance to therapy
PATIENT EDUCATION
CONCLUSION
AUTHOR CONTRIBUTIONS
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