| Literature DB >> 26443336 |
J Eales1, I Lenoir-Wijnkoop2, S King1, H Wood1, F J Kok3, R Shamir4, A Prentice5, M Edwards1, J Glanville1, R L Atkinson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Yoghurt is part of the diet of many people worldwide and is commonly recognised as a 'health food'. Epidemiological studies suggest that yoghurt may be useful as part of weight management programs. In the absence of comprehensive systematic reviews, this systematic review investigated the effect of yoghurt consumption by apparently healthy adults on weight-related outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26443336 PMCID: PMC4856732 DOI: 10.1038/ijo.2015.202
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Obes (Lond) ISSN: 0307-0565 Impact factor: 5.095
Figure 1Record selection process. Above the dashed line indicates records retrieved from a wide scoping search for studies of yoghurt in the health science literature. Below the dashed line indicates where study selection criteria for this systematic review (yoghurt for weight-related outcomes were applied.
Study details
| Albertson | Data from 1999 to 2002 | % male NR | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 8552 analysed | Yoghurt eaters had lower BMI compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Beydoun | Data from 1999 to 2004 | ~47% male | BMI NR for included participants. Data from wider NHANES population with demographic data, | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 14 618 participants | Yoghurt consumption was associated with reduced BMI for both genders, when analysed together and separately ( |
| Gugger | NR (N/A) | 0% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 2883 (dropouts not reported) | Women who consumed at least one serving of yoghurt had a significantly lower BMI compared with those consuming no yoghurt ( |
| Joshi | Data from 2007 to 2008 | 0% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 2672 (no dropouts reported) | After adjusting for covariates, yoghurt eaters' BMI was lower compared with non-yoghurt eaters by 1.3 kg m−2 ( |
| Murphy | Recruited between 2004 and 2007 | 49% male | BMI: 32.4±5.7 kg m−2 ( | Prospective cross-sectional study | 720 participants | Yoghurt consumption was not associated with BMI in any models |
| Shilsky | 24 weeks (12 weeks of weight loss followed by 12 weeks of weight loss maintenance) | 0% male | BMI: overweight/obese | RCT | 76 randomised | Both yoghurt and control groups: significant decreases in BMI over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | 6 weeks | 0% male | BMI: yoghurt: 29.4±2.0 kg m−2; control: 28.7±2.2 kg m−2 (NS) Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 78.3±7.9; control: 75.3±5.7 (NS) Waist circumference (cm): yoghurt: 85.3±6.5; control: 86.8±6.0 (NS) | RCT | 35 recruited (29 after dropouts) | Both yoghurt and control groups: significant decrease in BMI ( |
| Wang | FHS participants examined between 1998 and 2001; Generation Three Cohort examined between 2002 and 2005 (N/A) | 45.7% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 6526 participants | Yoghurt consumers had significantly lower BMI compared with non-consumers ( |
| Al-Naggar | 14 days | % male NR | BMI: >25 kg m−2 | RCT | 30 recruited (30 completed | Unclear |
| Bazzarre | 4 weeks | 25% male | Body weight NR (all subjects were within 20% of their ideal weight) | Cross-over trial | 30 recruited (20 analysed) | NS change for males ( |
| Drapeau | Baseline between 1989 and 1994; Follow-up: 1995–2000 (mean: 5.9±0.1 years) | 45% male | BMI: 25.3±0.3 kg m−2 (range=17.4–55.6) | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 248 participants | In all models: changes in yoghurt consumption were NS related to body weight change |
| Jordan | 10 weeks | 16% male | BMI NR (at least 15% overweight) | Controlled trial | 528 randomised (268 completed) | High yoghurt eaters moved closer to an ideal (lower) weight compared with low yoghurt eaters, but regression analysis indicated no significant relationship between the frequency of yoghurt ingestion and weight loss |
| McNamara | 3 week baseline, two 4-week test periods | 100% male | BMI: 23.4±2.8 kg m−2 Body weight (kg): 74.7±13.0 | Cross-over trial | 18 participants (no dropouts reported) | No significant weight changes ( |
| Mozaffarian | NHS and HPFS baseline data in 1986; NHSII baseline data in 1991 (20 years in the NHS, 12 years in the NHSII, 20 years in the HPFS) | NHS and NHSII: 0% male; HPFS: 100% male; overall: 18.7% male | BMI: NHS: 23.7±1.4 kg m−2; NHSII: 23.0±2.7 kg m−2; HPFS: 24.7±1.1 kg m−2 Body weight: NHS: 141±20; NHSII: 138±20; HPFS: 175±20 (lbs) | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 120 877 participants | Increased consumption of yoghurt was correlated with decreased weight gain across the 4-year periods, when controlling for age and also when baseline BMI and all lifestyle factors were added as covariates |
| Shilsky | 24 weeks (12 weeks of weight loss followed by 12 weeks of weight loss maintenance) | 0% male | BMI: overweight/obese | RCT | 76 randomised | Both groups: significant decreases in body weight over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | 6 weeks | 0% male | BMI: yoghurt: 29.4±2.0 kg m−2; control: 28.7±2.2 kg m−2 (NS) Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 78.3±7.9; control: 75.3±5.7 (NS) Waist circumference (cm): yoghurt: 85.3±6.5; control: 86.8±6.0 (NS) | RCT | 35 recruited (29 after dropouts) | Both groups: significant decrease in body weight ( |
| Thompson | 9-week study period | 38% male | BMI NR (99.5±0.74% within desirable weight) Body weight: 137.5±2.9 (lbs, mean±s.e.m.) | RCT | 56 recruited | Over 3 weeks, a small, significant increase in body weight for yoghurt ( |
| Vergnaud | 6 years | 55% male | BMI: men: 25.2±3.0 kg m−2 ; women: 23.5±3.7 kg m−2 Body weight (kg): men: 76.0±10.5; women: 60.8±10.0 Waist circumference (cm): men: 90.3±9.0; women: 76.1±9.4 | Retrospective, population-based cohort study | 2267 participants | Yoghurt consumption was associated with smaller increases in body weight over 6 years in overweight men. An opposite (positive) trend was seen in normal-weight women |
| Wang | Median follow-up of 12.9 years | ~45–46.9% male | BMI: 27.4±4.9 kg m−2 Body weight (kg): 77.5±16.6 Waist circumference (cm): 92.5±14.2 | Retrospective, population-based cohort study | 3440 participants | High yoghurt consumers had >50% smaller weight gain over 12.9 years compared with low consumers ( |
| White | 8 weeks | 0% male | Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 70.8±11.0; CHO+PRO: 61.7±7.3; CHO: 63.6±6.3
Note: Yoghurt group had a significantly higher baseline weight compared with CHO+PRO ( | RCT | 45 recruited (42 completed; 35 compliant) | Nonsignificant trend for increase in weight during the study in yoghurt and CHO+PRO groups, but not CHO only |
| Zemel | 12 weeks | Yoghurt: 27.8% male; control: 12.5% male | BMI: yoghurt: 32.1±0.4 kg m−2; control: 33.2±0.9 kg m−2 | RCT | 38 recruited (34 completed) | Yoghurt group lost 22% more weight compared with control ( |
| Albertson | Data from 1999 to 2002 | % male NR | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 8552 analysed | Yoghurt eaters had significantly lower WC compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Al-Naggar | 14 days | % male NR | BMI: >25 kg m−2 | RCT | 30 recruited (30 completed) | Unclear |
| Beydoun | Data from 1999 to 2004 | ~47% male | BMI NR for included participants. Data from wider NHANES population with demographic data, | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 14 484 participants | Yoghurt was associated with reduced WC for both genders, when analysed together and separately ( |
| Drapeau | Baseline between 1989 and 1994; Follow-up: 1995–2000 (mean: 5.9±0.1 years) | 45% male | BMI: 25.3±0.3 kg m−2 (range=17.4–55.6) | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 248 participants | Significant positive effect of changes in yoghurt consumption on WC in all models, including the full model with adjustments for covariates ( |
| Joshi | Data from 2007 to 2008 | 0% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 2672 (no dropouts reported) | After adjusting for covariates, WC of yoghurt eaters was lower compared with non-yoghurt eaters by 3.5 cm ( |
| Murphy | Recruited between 2004 and 2007 | 49% male | BMI: 32.4±5.7 kg m−2 ( | Prospective cross-sectional study | 720 participants | Yoghurt consumption was inversely associated with WC in the basic model ( |
| Shilsky | 24 weeks (12 weeks of weight loss followed by 12 weeks of weight loss maintenance) | 0% male | BMI: overweight/obese | RCT | 76 randomised | Both groups: significant decreases in WC over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | 6 weeks | 0% male | BMI: yoghurt: 29.4±2.0 kg m−2; control: 28.7±2.2 kg m−2 (NS). Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 78.3±7.9 kg m−2; control: 75.3±5.7 kg m−2 (NS) Waist circumference (cm): yoghurt: 85.3±6.5; control: 86.8±6.0 (NS) | RCT | 35 recruited (29 after dropouts) | Both groups: significant decrease in WC ( |
| Vergnaud | 6 years | 55% male | BMI: men: 25.2±3.0 kg m−2; women: 23.5±3.7 kg m−2 Body weight (kg): men: 76.0±10.5; women: 60.8±10.0 Waist circumference (cm): men: 90.3±9.0; women: 76.1±9.4 | Retrospective, population-based cohort study | 2267 participants | Yoghurt was associated with lower increases in WC in overweight men only, over 6 years |
| Wang | FHS participants examined between 1998 and 2001; Generation Three Cohort examined between 2002 and 2005 (N/A) | 45.7% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 6526 participants | Yoghurt consumers had significantly smaller WC compared with non-consumers ( |
| Wang | Median follow-up of 12.9 years | ~45–46.9% male | BMI: 27.4±4.9 kg m−2 Body weight (kg): 77.5±16.6 Waist circumference (cm): 92.5±14.2 | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 3440 participants | High consumers of yoghurt gained about 20% less WC per year compared with low yoghurt consumers ( |
| Zemel | 12 weeks | Yoghurt: 27.8% male; control: 12.5% male | BMI: yoghurt: 32.1±0.4 kg m−2; control: 33.2±0.9 kg m−2 | RCT | 38 recruited (34 completed) | WC decreased in the yoghurt group compared with the control group ( |
| Drapeau | Baseline between 1989 and 1994; Follow-up: 1995 and 2000 (mean: 5.9±0.1 years) | 45% male | BMI: 25.3±0.3 kg m−2 (range=17.4–55.6) | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 248 participants | No association between low-fat yoghurt and two adiposity measures: change in percentage body fat or change in the sum of 6 skinfold thicknesses over 5.9 years |
| Joshi | Data from 2007 to 2008 | 0% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 2672 (no dropouts reported) | After adjusting for covariates, % body fat was lower compared with non-yoghurt eaters by 1.5% ( |
| Murphy | Recruited between 2004 and 2007 | 49% male | BMI: 32.4±5.7 kg m−2 ( | Prospective cross-sectional study | 720 participants | Yoghurt consumption was significantly inversely associated with % body fat in all models. Yoghurt consumption was inversely correlated with abdominal fat ( |
| Shilsky | 24 weeks (12 weeks of weight loss followed by 12 weeks of weight loss maintenance) | 0% male | BMI: overweight/obese | RCT | 76 randomised | Both groups: significant decreases in fat mass over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | 6 weeks | 0% male | BMI: yoghurt: 29.4±2.0 kg m−2; control: 28.7±2.2 kg m−2 (NS) Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 78.3±7.9; control: 75.3±5.7 (NS) Waist circumference (cm): yoghurt: 85.3±6.5; control: 86.8±6.0 (NS) | RCT | 35 recruited (29 after dropouts) | Both groups: significant decrease in % body fat ( |
| White | 8 weeks | 0% male | Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 70.8±11.0; CHO+PRO: 61.7±7.3; CHO: 63.6±6.3
Note: Yoghurt group had a significantly higher baseline weight compared with CHO+PRO ( | RCT | 45 recruited (42 completed; 35 compliant) | All groups: significant decrease in % body fat ( |
| Zemel | 12 weeks | Yoghurt: 27.8% male; control: 12.5% male | BMI: yoghurt: 32.1±0.4 kg m−2; control: 33.2±0.9 kg m−2 | RCT | 38 recruited (34 completed) | Yoghurt group lost 61% more fat ( |
| Thomas | 6 weeks | 0% male | BMI: yoghurt: 29.4±2.0 kg m−2; control: 28.7±2.2 kg m−2 (NS) Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 78.3±7.9; control: 75.3±5.7 (NS) Waist circumference (cm): yoghurt: 85.3±6.5; control: 86.8±6.0 (NS) | RCT | 35 recruited (29 after dropouts) | Both groups: significant increase in % lean body mass ( |
| White | 8 weeks | 0% male | Body weight (kg): yoghurt: 70.8±11.0 kg m−2; CHO+PRO: 61.7±7.3 kg m−2; CHO: 63.6±6.3 kg m−2
Note: Yoghurt group had a significantly higher baseline weight compared with CHO+PRO ( | RCT | 45 recruited (42 completed; 35 compliant) | All groups: significant increase in fat-free mass ( |
| Zemel | 12 weeks | Yoghurt: 27.8% male; control: 12.5% male | BMI: yoghurt: 32.1±0.4 kg m−2; control: 33.2±0.9 kg m−2 | RCT | 38 recruited (34 completed) | Significantly more lean body mass was lost on control diet compared with the yoghurt diet ( |
| Albertson | Data from 1999 to 2002 | % male NR | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 8552 analysed | A lower proportion of overweight female yoghurt eaters compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Beydoun | Data from 1999 to 2004 | ~47% male | BMI NR for included participants. Data from wider NHANES population with demographic data, | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 14 618 participants | Yoghurt was negatively associated with obesity, BMI ⩾30 kg m−2 ( |
| Gugger | NR (N/A) | 0% male | NR | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 2883 (dropouts not reported) | More frequent yoghurt consumption was associated with a significantly lower incidence of overweight/obesity ( |
| Lee | Data from 2007, 2008 and 2009 | 47% male | Mean BMI=~23.5 kg m−2 | Retrospective cross-sectional study | 7173 (no dropouts reported) | Higher intake of yoghurt (measured in a Food Frequency Questionnaire) was associated with a lower prevalence of obesity ( |
| Martinez-Gonzalez | Enrolment from 2006 to September 2010 Median follow-up of 6.6 years | ~33% male | BMI: 21.9±1.9 kg m−2 | Prospective cohort study | 9506 recruited (8516 completed with no missing values) | High yoghurt consumption was associated with a lower risk of overweight/obesity when compared with low consumption ( |
| Pereira | ~10 years | ~43% male | 100% had BMI ⩾25 kg m−2 | Retrospective population-based cohort study | 923 participants | Odds of overweight participants developing obesity reduced (NS) with increased consumption of yoghurt, controlling for confounders |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CHO, carbohydrate; FHS, Framingham heart study; HPFS, Health Professionals Follow-Up Study; N/A, not applicable; NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey; NHS, Nurses' Health Study; NR, not reported; NS, not significant; PRO, protein; RCT, randomised controlled trial; s.d., standard deviation; s.e.m., standard error of the mean; WC, waist circumference.
Summary of included studies
| Albertson | Yoghurt eaters had lower BMI compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Beydoun | Yoghurt consumption was associated with reduced BMI for both genders, when analysed together and separately ( |
| Gugger | Women who consumed at least one serving of yoghurt had a significantly lower BMI compared with those consuming no yoghurt ( |
| Joshi | After adjusting for covariates, yoghurt eaters' BMI was lower compared with non-yoghurt eaters by 1.3 kg m−2 ( |
| Murphy | Yoghurt consumption was not associated with BMI in any models |
| Shilsky | Both yoghurt and control groups: significant decreases in BMI over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | Both yoghurt and control groups: significant decrease in BMI ( |
| Wang | Yoghurt consumers had significantly lower BMI compared with non-consumers ( |
| Al-Naggar | Unclear |
| Bazzarre | NS change for males ( |
| Drapeau | In all models: changes in yoghurt consumption were NS related to body weight change |
| Jordan | High yoghurt eaters moved closer to an ideal (lower) weight compared to low yoghurt eaters, but regression analysis indicated no significant relationship between the frequency of yoghurt ingestion and weight loss |
| McNamara | No significant weight changes ( |
| Mozaffarian | Increased consumption of yoghurt was correlated with decreased weight gain across the 4-year periods, when controlling for age and also when baseline BMI and all lifestyle factors were added as covariates |
| Shilsky | Both groups: significant decreases in body weight over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | Both groups: significant decrease in body weight ( |
| Thompson | Over 3 weeks, a small, significant increase in body weight for yoghurt ( |
| Vergnaud | Yoghurt consumption was associated with smaller increases in body weight over 6 years in overweight men. An opposite (positive) trend was seen in normal-weight women |
| Wang | High yoghurt consumers had >50% smaller weight gain over 12.9 years compared with low consumers ( |
| White | Nonsignificant trend for increase in weight during the study in yoghurt and CHO+PRO groups, but not CHO only |
| Zemel | Yoghurt group lost 22% more weight compared with control ( |
| Albertson | Yoghurt eaters had significantly lower WC compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Al-Naggar | Unclear |
| Beydoun | Yoghurt was associated with reduced WC for both genders, when analysed together and separately ( |
| Drapeau | Significant positive effect of changes in yoghurt consumption on WC in all models, including the full model with adjustments for covariates ( |
| Joshi | After adjusting for covariates, WC of yoghurt eaters was lower compared with non-yoghurt eaters by 3.5 cm ( |
| Murphy | Yoghurt consumption was inversely associated WC in the basic model ( |
| Shilsky | Both groups: significant decreases in WC over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | Both groups: significant decrease in WC ( |
| Vergnaud | Yoghurt was associated with lower increases in WC in overweight men only, over 6 years |
| Wang | Yoghurt consumers had significantly smaller WC compared with non-consumers ( |
| Wang | High consumers of yoghurt gained about 20% less WC per year compared with low yoghurt consumers ( |
| Zemel | WC decreased in the yoghurt group compared with the control group ( |
| Drapeau | No association between low-fat yoghurt and two adiposity measures: change in percentage body fat or change in the sum of 6 skinfold thicknesses over 5.9 years |
| Joshi | After adjusting for covariates, % body fat was lower than non-yoghurt eaters by 1.5% ( |
| Murphy | Yoghurt consumption was significantly inversely associated with % body fat in all models. Yoghurt consumption was inversely correlated with abdominal fat ( |
| Shilsky | Both groups: significant decreases in fat mass over 24 weeks ( |
| Thomas | Both groups: significant decrease in % body fat ( |
| White | All groups: significant decrease in % body fat ( |
| Zemel | Yoghurt group lost 61% more fat ( |
| Thomas | Both groups: significant increase in % lean body mass ( |
| White | All groups: significant increase in fat-free mass ( |
| Zemel | Significantly more lean body mass was lost on control diet compared with the yoghurt diet ( |
| Albertson | A lower proportion of overweight female yoghurt eaters compared with non-yoghurt eaters ( |
| Beydoun | Yoghurt was negatively associated with obesity, BMI ⩾30 ( |
| Gugger | More frequent yoghurt consumption was associated with a significantly lower incidence of overweight/obesity ( |
| Lee | Higher intake of yoghurt (measured in a Food Frequency Questionnaire) was associated with a lower prevalence of obesity ( |
| Martinez-Gonzalez | High yoghurt consumption was associated with a lower risk of overweight/obesity when compared with low consumption ( |
| Pereira | Odds of overweight participants developing obesity reduced (NS) with increased consumption of yoghurt, controlling for confounders |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; NR, not reported; NS, nonsignificant; RCT, randomised controlled trial; WC, waist circumference.
Figure 2Forest plot of comparison: yoghurt vs control as part of an energy-restricted diet in mostly overweight/obese participants. Risk of bias: (A) random sequence generation; (B) allocation concealment; (C) blinding of participants and personnel; (D) incomplete outcome data; (E) selective reporting; (F) other bias. (a) Outcome: change in body weight. (i) All three RCTs. (ii) Sensitivity analysis excluding RCT with a high risk of bias. (b) Outcome: change in WC. (c) Outcome: change in body fat.