If you or a loved one has had a stem cell transplant, you know the diet rules can be overwhelming. No fresh fruits, no raw vegetables, no unpasteurized anything. The idea is to prevent infection. But do these strict diets actually work?
A new research review is set to find out. The review will look at studies comparing restrictive diets (like neutropenic or low-microbial diets) with more flexible, food-safety-based approaches. The goal is to see which approach leads to fewer infections, better nutrition, and higher quality of life.
This is important because these diets can be hard to follow and may lead to nutritional gaps. The review will also look at other outcomes like time to neutrophil recovery, graft-versus-host disease, and even cost. But it's important to note that this is just a protocol, meaning the review hasn't been done yet. The findings are not available.
So for now, patients and families should continue following their doctor's advice. But this review could eventually change how hospitals handle post-transplant nutrition.