Fiber and polyphenol-rich dietary interventions: gut microbiome-mediated health effects
This narrative review synthesizes evidence that fiber- and polyphenol-rich diets favorably modulate gut microbial composition and SCFA production, but provides no pooled quantitative estimates or formal meta-analysis to support magnitude of effect claims.
Kontext
Poor dietary habits — excess sodium, meat, sugar, and trans fats — are established risk factors for non-communicable diseases. The gut microbiome mediates part of this risk by converting dietary substrates into immunometabolic effectors. Microbiome-targeted dietary interventions represent a potentially modifiable public health strategy.
Was die Studie zeigte
The review describes mechanisms by which fermentable fibers and polyphenols increase butyrate producers (Faecalibacterium, Roseburia, Ruminococcus) and propionate producers (Akkermansia, Bacteroides), with downstream reductions in pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-6, IFN-γ, IL-17) and strengthened tight junctions. Branched-chain fatty acids (BCFAs), markers of excessive protein fermentation, decrease when transitioning from a Western to a Mediterranean diet. No pooled data with 95% CIs or effect sizes are reported; figures cited originate from heterogeneous primary studies not subject to meta-analysis.
Wie es durchgeführt wurde
Narrative review published in 2025 in Frontiers in Nutrition; no PRISMA protocol, explicit inclusion/exclusion criteria, systematic search strategy, or formal risk-of-bias assessment. Synthesizes mechanistic microbiology, in vitro studies, animal studies, and clinical trials of unstandardized size and quality.
Effektgröße
Not applicable: no pooled effect size (OR, RR, SMD, MD) with 95% CI is calculated; the review is narrative and mechanistic, without quantitative synthesis.
Einschränkungen
No systematic protocol (no PRISMA/AMSTAR-2 compliance), no risk-of-bias assessment of included studies (RoB 2 or ROBINS-I not applied), unquantified heterogeneity across populations and interventions, uncontrolled literature selection bias, and unstratified mixing of in vitro, animal, and human evidence. The review does not support direct causal inference for clinical practice.
In der klinischen Praxis
Clinicians may advise increased fermentable fiber and polyphenol-rich food intake as part of a healthy dietary pattern, based on mechanistic plausibility and consistent primary evidence — but must not quantify expected benefits from this review alone. Individualized clinical decisions require consulting outcome-specific meta-analyses and RCTs.
Was noch fehlt
Adequately powered RCTs and outcome-specific meta-analyses targeting hard clinical endpoints (mortality, cardiovascular events, diabetes progression) with standardized fiber/polyphenol doses and functional microbiome measures are needed.
