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Evaluating the Added Benefit of Osteopathic Care to a Flexi-FODMAP Diet in Fibromyalgia Patients With Irritable Bowel Syndrome: a Randomized Sham-controlled Trial
Sponsor: Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel
Summary
Dietary modifications are often recommended as first-line treatment for irritable bowel syndrome, with the FODMAP diet being the most effective intervention to improve global gastrointestinal symptoms. Due to the heterogeneity of symptoms, patients often seek complementary or alternative therapies. This randomized clinical trial aims to determine whether osteopathic care provides additional improvement in gastrointestinal symptoms compared to sham osteopathic care, when both are combined with a flexible FODMAP diet. The trial will also assess the safety and tolerability of osteopathic care. The main questions it aims to answer are: Does osteopathic care reduce IBS symptom severity more than sham osteopathic care? Does osteopathic care improve pain, quality of life, anxiety, fatigue, work productivity, and gut microbiota compared to sham osteopathic care? Do participants adhere to the flexible FODMAP diet and osteopathic care, and are the effects of osteopathic care maintained at 3- and 6-months post-intervention? Can pretreatment factors, such as sociodemographic characteristics, IBS severity, predominant symptoms, psychological state, or gut microbiota composition, predict response to osteopathic care? What adverse effects occur with osteopathic care compared to sham care? Participants will: Visit the osteopathy clinic to receive four sessions of real or sham osteopathic care Complete online assessments before and after the intervention, and at 3- and 6-months post-intervention Provide stool samples before and after the four osteopathic or sham sessions Keep a three-day food diary and a ten-day stool diary before and after the intervention, and at 3- and 6-months post-intervention
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
18 Years - Any
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
96
Start Date
2025-10
Completion Date
2027-06
Last Updated
2025-09-16
Healthy Volunteers
No
Interventions
Osteopathic care
Participants allocated to the osteopathic care group will receive 4 weekly consultations of person-centered osteopathic care. Each consultation will last approximately 45 minutes and consist of a careful medical history, a clinical examination, treatment, and advice (e.g. exercise, dietary, lifestyle). The osteopathic treatment protocol could be labeled as 'custom tailored': the determination of the treatment was left to the clinical judgment of the osteopath, meaning that no predefined, standardized osteopathic protocol would be implemented. Standard osteopathic techniques (Glossary of Osteopathic Terminology) can be applied, including diagnostic techniques (e.g. observation, neurological tests, palpation, and motion testing) and therapeutic direct (e.g. high-velocity low-amplitude, muscle energy), indirect techniques (e.g. strain counter strain, balanced ligamentous tension, balanced membranous tension), or combined techniques.
Sham Osteopathic care
For this trial, sham intervention will mimic the osteopathic care according to the "touch equality assumption". Therefore, it mimics a clinical examination and treatment. The sham clinical evaluation involves a full evaluation of the position and mobility of the spine.This screening of the patient will be performed using conventional osteopathic manual tests, without any intention to make a diagnosis. Sham treatment will involve light manual contact, with the subject lying supine on the treatment table.
Flexi-FODMAP Diet
In addition to the real or sham osteopathic care, all participants will follow a 4-week flexi-FODMAP diet delivered online. Participants will receive structured dietary instructions via a customized online platform, based on the NHS Gentle-FODMAP diet guidelines and informed by expert input from dieticians. This modified "FODMAP-gentle" approach involves a targeted, less restrictive elimination of selected high-FODMAP foods.