| Literature DB >> 25278774 |
Abdul-Razak Abubakari1, Mohammad-Mahdi Naderali2, Ebrahim K Naderali3.
Abstract
As longevity increases, so does the global prevalence of cognitive dysfunction. Numerous lifestyle and/or dietary interventions such as omega-3 fatty acids have been suggested to improve memory. Therefore, this study examined the consistency and strength of the impact of supplementation of omega-3 fatty acids on overall cognitive function using systematic reviews and meta-analytic methods. Of 905 studies retrieved from all searches, 12 randomized controlled trials were included in the meta-analysis. There were differences between studies reporting outcomes for single memory function parameters. Subgroup analysis of doses used (low versus high) indicated that subjects receiving low (<1.73 g/day) doses of omega-3 fatty acids had a significant reduction in cognitive decline rate (-0.07, 95% confidence interval -0.01, -0.02) but there was no evidence for beneficial effects at higher doses (+0.04, 95% confidence interval -0.06, +0.14) compared with the placebo group. This study suggests that omega-3 fatty acids may be beneficial in preventing memory decline at lower doses.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; cognitive impairment; dietary fatty acids; docosahexaenoic acid; omega-3
Year: 2014 PMID: 25278774 PMCID: PMC4179753 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S67065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Methodological, sample, and intervention characteristics of studies included in meta-analysis
| Study characteristics
| Sample characteristics
| Intervention characteristics
| Study quality
| |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reference | a. Setting | Sample size | Study design | a. Ratio of women to men | Description of intervention | Description of control | Measure/s of cognitive function | Duration of: | Daily dose | a. Blinding (yes/no) |
| Hamazaki et al | a. Two universities, Japan | a. 53 | RCT | a. 34 F: 19 M | Intervention group asked to take 10–12 capsules of DHA for 3 months | Control group asked to take 10–12 capsules of control oil for 3 months | Stroop test: to measure accuracy and speed of instantaneous judgement Dementia-detecting test revised to assess higher function of brain | a. 3 months | 1.5–1.8 g | a. Yes (double-blind) |
| Fenton et al | a. Not reported | a. 87 | RCT | a. 34 F: 53 M | Six 500 mg capsules of ethyl EPA (3 g) | Six capsules of mineral oil | Cognitive function measured by the RBANS | a. 16 weeks | 3 g EPA | a. Yes |
| de Groot et al | a. Regions in the Netherlands | a. 56 | RCT | a. All female | Intervention group consumed 25 g per day of special margarine containing 2.82 g ALA + 9.02 g LA per day | Control group consumed 25 g per day of margarine containing 0.03 g ALA and 10.94 g LA per day | Cognitive function measured by several scales; only the WLTtot is reported here | a. Not clear | 2.82 g ALA | a. Yes |
| Freund-Levi et al | a. Stockholm, Sweden | a. 204 | RCT | a. 110 F: 94 M | Intervention group received 4×1 g capsules containing 430 g DHA+ 150 g EPA per day for 6 months | Control group received 4×1 g of placebo (containing 1 g of corn oil + 0.6 g of linolenic acid) per day for 6 months | Cognitive function measured by MMSE and ADAS-cog and global function by CDR | a. 6 and 12 months (6 months used due to crossover) | 430 mg DHA + 150 mg EPA (total n-3 LC-PUFA 580 mg) | a. Yes |
| Johnson et al | a. Boston, MA USA | a. 57 | RCT | a. All female | Subjects consumed capsules of DHA supplements with a given nutritional drink | Controls consumed placebo capsules identical to intervention (content not clearly described) | Verbal fluency determined by number of items named from a category within a minute; Stroop test used to determine processing speed | a. 4 months | DHA 800 mg | a. Yes |
| Chiu et al | a. Taipei City hospital, Taiwan. | a. 46 | RCT | a. 20 F: 15 M | Six capsules containing 1080 mg EPA + 720 mg DHA per day | Six capsules containing olive oil esters per day | Cognitive function assessed using | a. 24 weeks | 1,080 mg EPA + 720 mg DHA (total n-3 PUFA 1,800 mg) | a. Yes |
| Rogers et al | a. Bristol, UK | a. 218 | RCT | a. 168 F: 50 M | Three capsules containing 630 mg EPA + 850 mg DHA per day | Three capsules containing 2360 mg olive oil per day | Cognitive function measured by several tasks. | a. 12 weeks | 1.5 g of n-3 PUFA (630 mg EPA + 850 mg DHA) | a. Yes |
| van de Rest et al | a. Wageningen University, the Netherlands | a. 302 (202 relevant for this study) | RCT | a. 135 F: 167 M | High dose group (six daily capsules containing a total of 1800 mg EPA-DHA) | Placebo group (six capsules containing oleic acid) | Cognitive function determined using five different instruments. | a. 26 weeks | 1,800 mg of EPA-DHA | a. Yes |
| Antypa et al | a. The Netherlands (specific place not reported) | a. 54 | RCT | a. 44 F: 10 M | Three capsules containing 3 g of fish oil per day | Three capsules containing olive oil | Cognitive function assessed using 15-word memory test | a. 4 weeks | 3 g of fish oil (2.3 of n-3 PUFA (1.74 g EPA+0.25 g DHA). | a. Yes |
| Yurko-Mauro et al | a. 19 clinical sites, USA | a. 485 | RCT | a. 116 F: 84 M | Three capsules containing a total of 900 mg/day of DHA | Three capsules containing 50% corn oil + 50% soy oil per day | Cognitive function determined by 24 week Cantab® PAL (number of Cantab pattern errors) | a. 24 weeks | 900 g of DHA | a. Yes |
| Quinn et al | a. 51 clinical research sites, USA | a. 402 | RCT | a. 210 F: 192 M | Two capsules containing 2 g of DHA per day | Two capsules containing corn or soy oil per day | Change in cognitive function assessed using ADAS-cog | a. 18 months | 2 g of DHA | a. Yes |
| Dangour et al | a. England and Wales | a. 867 | RCT | a. 390 F: 477 M | Two capsules containing 700 mg n-3 PUFAs (200 mg EPA + 500 mg DHA) per day | Two capsules containing olive oil per day | Cognitive function measured by CVLT | a. 24 months | 700 mg n-3 PUFAs (200 mg EPA + 500 mg DHA) | a. Yes |
Notes:
Sample sizes for groups used in meta-analysis;
sample size reported for completers; †groups compared in meta-analysis.
Abbreviations: ARCD, age-related cognitive decline; BMI, body mass index; F, female; M, male; NC, not clear; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating score; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; MCI, mild/moderate cognitive impairment; WLT, Word Learning Test; WLTtot, total Words Learning Test; SD, standard deviation; RCT, randomized controlled trial; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; NR, not reported; NC, not clear from the data; ALA, alpha linolenic acid; LA, linolenic acid; EPA, eicosapentaenoic acid; DHA, docosahexaenoic acid; PUFA, polyunsaturated fatty acids; CIBIC-plus, Clinician Interview-Based Impression of Change, plus carer interview; ADAS-cog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fourth Edition; PAL, paired associate learning; RBANS, Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status.
Data analysis strategy, measures of cognitive function, and results from included studies
| Study reference | Analysis strategy (ITT/PP) | Measures of cognitive function used in current study | Indicator of cognitive improvement (↑↓) | Outcome of interest (intervention group) | Outcome of interest (control group) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamazaki et al | PP | Stroop test (100%) | ↑ (+) | BL, 50.8±11.4 | BL, 51.1±12.7 |
| Dementia-detecting test (DDT) (100%) | ↓ (−) | BL, 46.6±8.0 | BL, 49.1±9.9 | ||
| Fenton et al | ITT | RBANS | ↑ (+) | BL, 75±15 | BL, 77±40 |
| de Groot et al | NC | (WLTtot) | ↑ (+) | BL, 9.9±1.3 | BL, 10.5±1.8 |
| Freund-Levi et al | ITT/PP but results reported in PP | MMSE (0–30 points) | ↑ (+) | BL, 23.6 (22.8–24.4) | BL, 23.2 (22.4–24.0) |
| ADAS-cog (0–85 points) | ↓ (−) | BL, 25.7 (23.6–27.8) | BL, 27.2 (25.1–29.4) | ||
| CDR global score (0–3 points) | ↓ (−) | BL, 1.0 (0.9–1.1) | BL, 1.1 (1.0–1.2) | ||
| Johnson et al | PP | Verbal fluency | ↑ (+) | BL, 15.0±4.9 | BL, 12.9±6.2 |
| Stroop test (total RT-interference) | ↑ (+) | BL, 21.5±10.0 | BL, 25.0±14.8 | ||
| Chiu et al | ITT/PP | ADAS-cog | ↓ (−) | BL, 9.17±7.19 | BL, 7.99±7.13 |
| MMSE | ↑ (+) | BL, 25.06±3.99 | BL, 25.27±3.34 | ||
| Rogers et al | ITT/PP | Cognitive function measured using various tasks. Scores for simple reaction time is used | ↓ (−) | BL, 370±75 | BL, 381±56 |
| van de Rest et al | ITT | WLT (immediate recall-75 words) | ↑ (+) | BL, 39.3±8.8 | BL, 39.6±9.7 |
| Antypa et al | PP | 15-word list memory test: Delayed recall | ↑ (+) | BL, 9.55±2.48 | BL, 9.04±2.54 |
| Immediate recall | ↑ (+) | BL, 11.04±2.66 | BL, 10.72±2.56 | ||
| Yurko-Mauro et al | ITT | Cantab® PAL | ↓ (−) | BL, 13.4±11.6 | BL, 12.1±10.9 |
| MMSE | ↑ (+) | BL, 28.3±1.3 | BL, 28.2±1.3 | ||
| Quinn et al | ITT | ADAS-cog | ↓ (−) | Mean change (95% CI) | Mean change (95% CI) |
| PP used in secondary analysis | CDR, sum of boxes | ↓ (−) | 7.98 (6.51–9.45) | 8.27 (6.72–9.82) | |
| MMSE | ↑ (+) | −3.70 (–4.44, –2.96); | −4.04 (−4.85, −3.23) | ||
| Dangour et al | ITT | CVLT-total words recalled | ↑ (+) | BL, 24.1±6.0 | BL, 23.9±5.7 |
| Immediate story recall | ↑ (+) | BL, 11.1±3.9 | BL, 10.7±3.9 | ||
| Delayed story recall | ↑ (+) | BL, 8.9±3.8 | BL, 8.8±3.7 | ||
| Verbal fluency | ↑ (+) | BL, 19.8±5.1 | BL, 19.9±5.0 |
Notes: −This study used a cross-over design, thus results for first 6 months are compared;
P<0.05. The upward arrows and (+) indicate cognitive improvement in cognitive outcome in intervention group compared to the control group. Similarly, downward arrow and (−) indicate decline in cognitive outcome in intervention group compared to control group.
Abbreviations: BL, baseline; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; ITT, intention-to-treat analysis; NC, not clear from data; PP, per protocol analysis; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating score; WLT, Word Learning Test; WLTtot, total Words Learning Test; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination: ADAS-cog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale; RBANS, Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status; CI, confidence interval; PAL, paired associate learning; RT, total interference from Stroop test for speed and accuracy of processing.
Figure 1Search results and number of studies included at various stages.
Figure 2Forest plot for omega-3 fatty acid supplementation and cognitive decline.
Abbreviations: ADAS-cog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale; CI, confidence interval; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; DDT, dementia detecting test; WLTtot, total Words Learning Test; 15-WLMT, Word List (memory) Test; RBANS, Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; WLT, Word Learning Test; PAL, paired associate learning; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; SMD, standardized mean difference; SRT, simple reaction time.
Figure 3Forest plot of omega-3 fatty acid for low and high dose compared with no supplementation (control).
Abbreviations: ADAS-cog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale; CVLT, California Verbal Learning Test; DDT, dementia detecting test; WLTtot, total Words Learning Test; 15-WLMT, Word List (memory) Test; RBANS, Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; WLT, Word Learning Test; PAL, paired associate learning; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; SMD, standardized mean difference; SRT, simple reaction time; CI, confidence interval.