| Literature DB >> 21529374 |
Tanis R Fenton1, Suzanne C Tough, Andrew W Lyon, Misha Eliasziw, David A Hanley.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Modern diets have been suggested to increase systemic acid load and net acid excretion. In response, alkaline diets and products are marketed to avoid or counteract this acid, help the body regulate its pH to prevent and cure disease. The objective of this systematic review was to evaluate causal relationships between dietary acid load and osteoporosis using Hill's criteria. <br> METHODS: Systematic review and meta-analysis. We systematically searched published literature for randomized intervention trials, prospective cohort studies, and meta-analyses of the acid-ash or acid-base diet hypothesis with bone-related outcomes, in which the diet acid load was altered, or an alkaline diet or alkaline salts were provided, to healthy human adults. Cellular mechanism studies were also systematically examined. <br> RESULTS: Fifty-five of 238 studies met the inclusion criteria: 22 randomized interventions, 2 meta-analyses, and 11 prospective observational studies of bone health outcomes including: urine calcium excretion, calcium balance or retention, changes of bone mineral density, or fractures, among healthy adults in which acid and/or alkaline intakes were manipulated or observed through foods or supplements; and 19 in vitro cell studies which examined the hypothesized mechanism. Urine calcium excretion rates were consistent with osteoporosis development; however calcium balance studies did not demonstrate loss of whole body calcium with higher net acid excretion. Several weaknesses regarding the acid-ash hypothesis were uncovered: No intervention studies provided direct evidence of osteoporosis progression (fragility fractures, or bone strength as measured using biopsy). The supporting prospective cohort studies were not controlled regarding important osteoporosis risk factors including: weight loss during follow-up, family history of osteoporosis, baseline bone mineral density, and estrogen status. No study revealed a biologic mechanism functioning at physiological pH. Finally, randomized studies did not provide evidence for an adverse role of phosphate, milk, and grain foods in osteoporosis. <br> CONCLUSIONS: A causal association between dietary acid load and osteoporotic bone disease is not supported by evidence and there is no evidence that an alkaline diet is protective of bone health.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21529374 PMCID: PMC3114717 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2891-10-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
HILL'S CRITERIA OF CAUSATION
| Criteria | Description |
|---|---|
| TEMPORALITY | An exposure must be measured prior the disease, for it to be clear which variable might be the cause and which variable might be the result. |
| STRENGTH | This criterion requires that the putative cause of an illness be of sufficient strength of association to cause disease. |
| BIOLOGICAL GRADIENT | This criterion requires that when the dose of an exposure is increased, the risk of the outcome should also increase |
| PLAUSIBILITY | This criterion requires that a theory fit with current biological knowledge. |
| CONSISTENCY | This criterion requires consistent evidence from a variety of study designs to support a causal relationship |
| EXPERIMENT | This criterion requires that actual experiments be conducted to determine whether the frequency of a disease is altered by an exposure. |
Figure 1Flow diagram of studies identified, excluded and included in the systematic review.
Randomized intervention Human Studies that Met the Inclusion Criteria
| Cochrane Risk of Bias Assessment | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study | Design | Exposures | Exposure quantified | Outcomes | Sequence generation | Allocation concealment | Incomplete outcome data | Selective |
| Patton [ | RCO | Phosphate salt | mg P | Calcium balance | low | High | low | low |
| Breslau [ | RCO | Protein foods | NAE | Urine calcium & absorption | low | High | low | Low |
| Whybro* [ | RCO | Phosphate salt | mmol P | Urine calcium | part 1 = low | High | low | low |
| Dahl [ | RCO | Lentils | NAE | Calcium balance | low | High | low | low |
| Kerstetter [ | RCO | Amount of protein | g protein | Urine calcium, absorption & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Buclin [ | RCO | Acid diet | No | Urine calcium & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Roughead [ | RCO | Amount of protein | NAE | Calcium balance & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Dawson-Hughes [ | RCT | Amount of protein | g protein | Urine calcium & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Roughead [ | RCO | Meat/soy | NAE | Calcium balance & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Sakhaee [ | RCO | K+citrate | K+citrate | Urine calcium, absorption & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Spence [ | RCO | Soy vs. milk protein | NAE | Calcium balance & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Kerstetter [ | RCO | Amount of protein | NAE | Calcium balance | low | High | low | low |
| Kemi [ | RCO | Phosphate salt | mg P | Urine calcium | low | High | low | low |
| Kerstetter [ | RCO | Amount & type of protein | NAE | Calcium balance & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Hunt [ | RCO | Protein | g protein, mg Ca | Calcium balance & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Ceglia* [ | RCT | K+bicarbonate | NAE | Urine calcium and absorption | low | High | low | low |
| Dawson-Hughes [ | RCT | K+bicarbonate | NAE | Urine calcium & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Frassetto [ | RCT | K+bicarbonate | K+bicarbonate | Urine calcium | low | High | low | low |
| Gettman [ | RCO | Cranberry juice | NAE | Urine calcium | low | High | low | low |
| Karp [ | RCO | K+citrate | K+citrate | Urine calcium & BTM | low | High | low | low |
| Jehle [ | RCT | K+citrate | NAE | BMD & BTM | low | High | low | High |
| MacDonald [ | RCT | K+citrate/fruit & veg | NEAP | BMD & BTM | low | low | low | low |
BMD = bone mineral density; BTM = bone turnover markers; ca = calcium, K+ = potassium; mg = milligram; mmol = millimole; NAE = Net acid excretion; NEAP =, net endogenous acid production; P = phosphate; RCO = random cross-over study; RCT = random control trial; veg = vegetables; * = only the randomized portions of this study fit the inclusion criteria
Prospective Observational Studies that met the Inclusion Criteria
| Study | Year | Population | Exposures | Outcomes | Results | Potential confounders controlled or stratified | Potential confounders not controlled |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feskanich | 1996 | Women 35 to 59 years | Protein intake | Fractures | Protein intake was associated with increased risk of forearm fracture; no association between protein intake and hip fractures. | Age, BMI, change of BMI, estrogen status, smoking, energy intake, physical activity, calcium, potassium, and vitamin D intakes. | Family history of osteoporosis, baseline BMD |
| Munger | 1999 | Postmenopausal women | Protein intake | Hip fractures | Protein intake was associated with lower hip fracture risk. | Age, body size, parity, smoking, alcohol intake, estrogen use, physical activity | Weight loss during follow-up, family history of osteoporosis, baseline BMD, vitamin D status, calcium intake |
| Tucker | 2001 | Adults 69 to 97 years | Fruit & vegetable nutrients, & protein | Change of BMD | Potassium, fruit & vegetable intakes among men were associated with less BMD loss. Protein intakes were associated with less BMD loss. | Energy intake, age, sex, weight, BMI, smoking, caffeine, alcohol intake, physical activity, calcium intake, calcium and/or vitamin D supplements, season, current estrogen use. | Weight loss during follow-up, family history of osteoporosis, baseline BMD |
| Promislow | 2002 | Adults 55 to 92 years | Protein intake | Change of BMD | Protein intake was associated with increased BMD over 4 years. | Energy intake, calcium intake, diabetes, number | Family history of osteoporosis, baseline BMD |
| Kaptoge | 2003 | Adults 67 to 79 years | Fruit, vegetables, vitamin C | Change of BMD | No associations between nutrients and BMD loss. In women, vitamin C was associated with less BMD loss. No associations for fruit and vegetable intakes. | Sex, age, BMI, weight change, physical activity, smoking, family history, energy intake. | Baseline BMD, estrogen status, vitamin D status, calcium intake |
| Rapuri | 2003 | Women 65 to 77 years | Protein intake | Change of BMD | No association between protein intake and the rate of bone loss. | Age, BMI, intakes of calcium, energy, fiber, vitamin D status, and alcohol, smoking, physical activity. | Weight loss during follow-up, baseline BMD, family history of osteoporosis |
| MacDonald | 2004 | Premenopausal women | Fruit & vegetables nutrients | Change of BMD | Among menstruating and perimenopausal women, intakes of vitamin C and magnesium, but not potassium, were associated with change of BMD. | Age, weight, change in weight, height, smoking, physical activity, socioeconomic status, baseline BMD. | Family history of osteoporosis, calcium intake, vitamin D status |
| Dargent-Molina | 2008 | Postmenopausal women | Protein & diet acid load | Fractures | No overall association between protein intake and acid excretion with fracture risk; in the lowest calcium intake quartile, protein intake was associated with fracture risk | Age, BMI, physical activity, parity, maternal history of hip fracture, hormonal therapy, smoking, alcohol, energy intake. | Weight loss during follow-up, baseline BMD, vitamin D status. |
| Thorpe | 2008 | Peri- and Postmenopausal women | Protein | Wrist fractures | Protein intake was associated with lower risk of wrist fracture, for both vegetable and meat protein. | Age, height, weight, BMI, education, any fracture since age 35, parity, smoking, alcohol use, diabetes mellitus, rheumatoid arthritis, physical activity, years since menopause. | Estrogen status, calcium intake |
| Pedone | 2009 | Women 60 to 96 years | Potential renal acid load | Change of BMD | Protein intake was associated with a lower loss of BMD. | Physical activity, energy intake, renal function, vitamin D status, estrogen status, baseline BMD. | Weight loss during follow-up, family history of osteoporosis, calcium intake. |
| Beasley | 2010 | Women 14 to 40 years | Protein intake | Change of BMD | No association between protein intake and change of BMD. | Age, race-ethnicity, age of menarche, time since menarche, family history of fracture, BMI, physical activity score, calories, dietary calcium, phosphorous, dietary vitamin D, magnesium, fluoride, alcohol, smoking, contraceptive use, prior pregnancy, and education | |
| Fenton | 2010 | Adults 25 years+ | Urine pH, urine potassium, sodium, calcium, magnesium, phosphate, sulfate, chloride, and acid excretion, controlled for urine creatinine | Change of BMD and fractures | No associations between urine pH or acid excretion and either the incidence of fractures or change of BMD | Age, gender, family history of osteoporosis, BMI, change in BMI, baseline BMD, estrogen status, kidney disease, smoking, thiazide diuretics, bisphosphonates, physical activity, calcium intake, and vitamin D status, urine creatinine,. | |
* BMD = bone mineral density; BMI = body mass index
Figure 2The relationship between change in NAE and change in urinary calcium, limited to randomized studies that followed the Institute of Medicines' guidelines for calcium metabolism studies (R2 = 0.406; p < 0.0001). This material is reproduced with permission of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. from Fenton et al. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24:1835-1840.
Figure 3No relationship between change in NAE and change in calcium balance, analysis limited to randomized studies that followed the Institute of Medicines' guidelines for calcium metabolism studies (R2 = 0.003; p = 0.38). This material is reproduced with permission of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. from Fenton et al. J Bone Miner Res 2009;24:1835-1840.
Figure 4The relationship between phosphate supplementation and change urine calcium, limited to randomized studies that followed the Institute of Medicines' guidelines for calcium metabolism studies (R.
Figure 5The relationship between phosphate supplementation and change calcium balance, limited to randomized studies that followed the Institute of Medicines' guidelines for calcium metabolism studies (R.
Change in Bone Resorption Markers in Response to a More Alkaline Diet
| 1st Author | year | n | Subjects | Comparison | Design | Change NAE | Marker | Fasting | Control | Alkaline | Percent change of marker |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kerstetter | 1999 | 16 | Women 20 - 40 years | High vs medium pro | RCO | NTX/Cr | yes | 48.2 (29) | 43.5 (28) | -10* | |
| Roughead | 2003 | 13 | Postmeno women | High to low meat | RCO | -19 | NTX/Cr | no | 3.77 (0.33)* | 3.88 (0.33)* | 11 |
| Dawson- Hughes | 2004 | 32 | Adults > 50 yrs | High vs low pro | RCT | NTX/Cr | no | 130 (71) | 198 (100) | 52* | |
| Roughead | 2005 | 15 | Postmeno women | Milk to soy pro | RCO | -11 | NTX/Cr | no | 3.08 (0.24)* | 3.20 (0.24)* | 15 |
| Sakhaee | 2005 | 18 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate | RCO | 0 | NTx/Cr | no | 33 (13) | 33 (14) | 0.0 |
| Sakhaee | 2005 | 18 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate | RCO | 0 | sCTX | yes | 0.54 (0.32) | 0.49 (0.29) | -9.3 |
| Spence | 2005 | 15 | Postmeno women | Milk to soy pro | RCO | -2 | NTX/Cr | no | 55.6 (29.0) | 48 (22.6) | -14 |
| Kerstetter | 2006 | 20 | Women | Amt of soy | RCO | -29 | NTx/Cr | yes | 52 (27) | 48 (13) | -7.7 |
| Kerstetter | 2006 | 20 | Women | Soy versus meat | RCO | -24 | NTx/Cr | yes | 64 (36) | 48 (13) | -25 |
| Kerstetter | 2006 | 20 | Women | Amt of meat | RCO | -18 | NTx/Cr | yes | 51 (36) | 64 (36) | 25 |
| Ceglia | 2008 | 19 | Adults > 50 yrs | KHCO3 (high pro) | RCT | -57 | NTX/Cr | no | 40.4 (19.1) | 35.1 (7.0) | -13 |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 46 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate (high) | RCT | DPD/Cr | yes | 8.1 (3.4) | 7.4 (2.0) | -8.6 | |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 44 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate (low) | RCT | DPD/Cr | yes | 7.5 (2.4) | 7.1 (2.1) | -5.3 | |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 50 | Postmeno women | Ft & veg | RCT | DPD/Cr | yes | 7.2 (2.3) | 7.1 (2.0) | -1.4 | |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 50 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate (high) | RCT | sCTX | no | 0.21 (0.11) | 0.20 (0.11) | -4.3 | |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 51 | Postmeno women | Kcitrate (low) | RCT | sCTX | no | 0.23 (0.11) | 0.22 (0.10) | -4.3 | |
| MacDonald | 2008 | 54 | Postmeno women | Ft & veg | RCT | sCTX | no | 0.20 (0.13) | 0.21 (0.11) | 5.0 | |
| Dawson- Hughes | 2009 | 162 | Adults > 50 yrs | K or Na HCO3 | RCT | -35 | NTX/Cr | no | 38.8 (17.2) | 33.7 (13.9) | -13 |
| Hunt | 2009 | 13 | Postmeno women | high to low pro (low Ca) | RCO | -24 | DPD/Cr | yes | 2.3 (0.2)* | 2.4 (0.2)* | 15* |
| Hunt | 2009 | 14 | Postmeno women | high to low pro (High Ca) | RCO | -22 | DPD/Cr | yes | 2.2 (0.2)* | 2.3 (0.2)* | 12* |
| Karp | 2009 | 12 | Women 20 - 30 years | Kcitrate | RCO | NTX/Cr | no | 23 (12) | 16 (10)* | -28* |
* p < 0.05
DPD/Cr = urine deoxypyridinoline to creatinine ratio; NTX/Cr = urine N-telopeptide to creatinine ratio; RCT = random control trial; RCO = random cross-over study; pro = protein, sCTX = serum C-telopeptide, * ln transformed data
Figure 6Changes of bone resorption markers in response to a more alkaline diet. The results were heterogeneous (p = 0.02), therefore it was not considered valid to combine them and examine the test for overall effect.
Figure 7Changes of bone resorption markers in response to a more alkaline diet, measured while subjects were fasting. The relationship between interventions to alter the diet acid load on bone resorption markers was not significant effect (p-value = 0.91).
Summary Table of the Evaluation of the Acid-ash Hypothesis using Hill's Criteria
| Hill's criterion | Is criterion met? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Temporality | Yes, by inclusion criteria | Papers were included only if this Temporality criterion was met, that is the exposure preceded the outcome. |
| Strength | Yes | Estimates of calcium loss in the urine are of sufficient magnitude to explain the progression of osteoporosis, while calcium balance studies do not show support of the acid ash hypothesis. |
| No | ||
| Biological Gradient or Dose-response | No | While urine calcium changes in response to changes in net acid excretion, calcium balance does not. Calcium balance is a better measure of whole body calcium metabolism than urine calcium. |
| Biologically Plausible | No | No defined mechanism that could take place at physiological pH. |
| No | Problems with the hypothesis due to the incongruent roles of phosphate, sodium, and protein with bone, and lack of support for the role of potassium. | |
| Consistency | No | The prospective observational cohort studies have not consistently controlled for the key osteoporosis risk factors, putting their findings into question. |
| No | The estimated effects of protein, milk and grain foods are not supported by evidence. | |
| No | The measurement of urinary acid excretion is not a precise science and measurements may be inaccurate. | |
| Experiments | No | The outcome measures used to date in experimental studies are only surrogate measures or correlates of bone strength. The majority of experimental evidence supporting the acid-ash hypothesis is from studies that used urine calcium and/or bone resorption markers as the outcomes, which are surrogate measures of bone strength. |
| No | The RCT that assessed changes of BMD with the lower risk of bias did not support the hypothesis. Therefore, the experimental evidence does not support the hypothesis | |
| No | Meta-analyses of bone resorption markers in response to changes in acid and alkali loads did not support the hypothesis whether all of the study results were combined or only studies that followed recommendations for bone markers were assessed. | |