Researchers in Japan studied over 1,600 people with ulcerative colitis (a disease that causes inflammation in the digestive system) to see if skipping breakfast affected their ability to stop taking steroid medications. They found that people who regularly skipped breakfast were more likely to successfully stop their steroid treatment compared to those who ate breakfast. This surprising finding suggests that when you eat might be just as important as what you eat when managing this chronic condition. However, experts caution that more research is needed before people should change their eating habits based on this single study.

The Quick Take

  • What they studied: Whether skipping breakfast regularly affects the ability of ulcerative colitis patients to stop taking steroid medications
  • Who participated: 1,645 people in Japan who had been diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and started steroid treatment. About 18% of them regularly skipped breakfast (more than 3 times per week), while the rest ate breakfast regularly.
  • Key finding: People who skipped breakfast more than 3 times per week were about 50% more likely to successfully stop their steroid medications compared to breakfast eaters (35.6% versus 32.4% stopped steroids). This difference remained even after accounting for other medications they were taking.
  • What it means for you: If you have ulcerative colitis and take steroids, this research suggests meal timing might matter for your treatment. However, you should NOT change your eating habits without talking to your doctor first, as this is one study and more research is needed to confirm these findings.

The Research Details

Researchers looked back at medical records from 2015 to 2023 for over 8 million people in Japan. They identified 1,645 patients who had been diagnosed with ulcerative colitis and started steroid treatment. They then tracked these patients for at least 3 years to see who was able to stop taking steroids. The researchers compared outcomes between people who regularly skipped breakfast (more than 3 times per week) and those who ate breakfast regularly. They used statistical methods to account for other factors that might affect the results, such as whether patients were also taking other medications for their condition.

This type of study is valuable because it looks at real-world medical records rather than controlled laboratory conditions. It allows researchers to study a large number of people over a long time period, which helps identify patterns that might not show up in smaller studies. By examining actual patient data, researchers can discover whether everyday habits like meal timing might influence serious health outcomes.

This study has several strengths: it included a large number of patients (1,645), followed them for several years, and used statistical methods to control for other medications that might affect the results. However, the study relied on medical claims data, which means researchers couldn’t directly observe whether people actually skipped breakfast—they inferred it from patterns in the data. Additionally, the study was observational, meaning researchers couldn’t prove that skipping breakfast caused better outcomes, only that it was associated with them.

What the Results Show

Among the 1,645 ulcerative colitis patients studied, 543 people (33%) were eventually able to stop taking steroid medications. In the group that skipped breakfast regularly, 35.6% successfully stopped steroids, compared to 32.4% in the group that ate breakfast. When researchers used statistical methods to account for other medications patients were taking, they found that breakfast skippers had about 1.5 times higher odds of stopping steroids. This means that for every 100 breakfast skippers, roughly 3-4 more people were able to stop steroids compared to breakfast eaters. The difference was statistically significant, meaning it’s unlikely to have happened by chance alone.

The study examined whether other factors influenced steroid withdrawal, including the use of 5-aminosalicylic acid (a common UC medication) and immunosuppressants (drugs that calm the immune system). Even after accounting for these medications, the association between breakfast skipping and steroid withdrawal remained strong. This suggests that meal timing may have an independent effect on disease control, separate from medication use.

This is one of the first studies to examine the relationship between breakfast skipping and steroid withdrawal in ulcerative colitis patients. Previous research has shown that meal timing affects digestive health and inflammation in general, but this is the first large-scale study to look specifically at breakfast habits and steroid medication use in UC. The findings align with emerging research suggesting that when you eat may influence inflammatory bowel diseases, though more studies are needed to confirm this pattern.

This study has important limitations to consider. First, researchers couldn’t directly observe whether patients actually skipped breakfast—they inferred it from medical claims data, which may not be perfectly accurate. Second, the study only shows association, not cause-and-effect; we can’t be certain that skipping breakfast caused better outcomes. Third, the study was conducted in Japan, so results may not apply equally to other populations with different genetics or lifestyles. Fourth, the study didn’t examine why breakfast skipping might help, so the mechanism remains unclear. Finally, the study couldn’t account for all factors that might influence steroid withdrawal, such as diet quality, stress levels, or exercise habits.

The Bottom Line

Based on this single study, doctors should NOT routinely recommend breakfast skipping to ulcerative colitis patients. However, this research is interesting enough to warrant further investigation. If you have ulcerative colitis and are taking steroids, continue following your doctor’s treatment plan. Do not change your eating habits based on this study alone. More research is needed before breakfast skipping can be recommended as a treatment strategy. (Confidence level: Low—this is preliminary evidence from one observational study)

This research is most relevant to people with ulcerative colitis who are taking steroid medications and want to understand all factors that might affect their treatment. It may also interest gastroenterologists and researchers studying inflammatory bowel diseases. People without ulcerative colitis should not assume these findings apply to them, as this study is specific to this disease. People taking steroids for other conditions should not change their eating habits based on this research.

If breakfast skipping does influence steroid withdrawal, the effect appears to develop over months to years, not days or weeks. In this study, patients were followed for at least 3 years. You should not expect to see changes in your condition immediately after changing meal timing. Any dietary changes should be discussed with your doctor and monitored over several months.

Want to Apply This Research?

  • Track breakfast consumption patterns (ate breakfast vs. skipped) daily, alongside steroid medication doses and any UC symptoms (pain, bathroom frequency, energy levels). This allows you to identify personal patterns and discuss them with your doctor.
  • If your doctor approves, you could experiment with tracking a week of normal breakfast habits, then a week of occasional breakfast skipping, while monitoring how you feel. Use the app to record any changes in symptoms, energy, or medication needs. Share this data with your healthcare provider.
  • Over 3-6 months, maintain a log of breakfast habits, steroid medication doses, and symptom severity. Look for patterns in your personal data—do your symptoms improve or worsen with different meal timing? This personalized tracking helps you and your doctor make informed decisions about your treatment plan.

This research describes an association between breakfast skipping and steroid medication withdrawal in ulcerative colitis patients, but does not prove that skipping breakfast causes better outcomes. This study should not be used as a basis for changing your diet or medication without consulting your healthcare provider. Ulcerative colitis is a serious medical condition requiring professional medical management. Do not stop taking steroid medications or change your eating habits without explicit guidance from your doctor. If you have ulcerative colitis, discuss these findings with your gastroenterologist before making any lifestyle changes. This summary is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice.