| Literature DB >> 27355649 |
Laura Pimpin1, Jason H Y Wu2, Hila Haskelberg2, Liana Del Gobbo1,3, Dariush Mozaffarian1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dietary guidelines recommend avoiding foods high in saturated fat. Yet, emerging evidence suggests cardiometabolic benefits of dairy products and dairy fat. Evidence on the role of butter, with high saturated dairy fat content, for total mortality, cardiovascular disease, and type 2 diabetes remains unclear. We aimed to systematically review and meta-analyze the association of butter consumption with all-cause mortality, cardiovascular disease, and diabetes in general populations. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27355649 PMCID: PMC4927102 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart of study identification and selection process.
All systematic review and meta-analyses methods conducted according to PRISMA guidelines.
Characteristics of 9 prospective studies providing risk estimates for the association between butter intake and total mortality, CVD and type 2 diabetes.
| Author (year) | Country | Population source and age | Diet assessment | Type of exposure | Median intake (top category (g/d)) | Disease ascertainment | Disease outcome | Sample size | Mean follow-up (y) | N events | Person- years | RR (95%CI) | Covariate adjustment | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | Residents of Californian community; (mean 70.6 yrs. (SD 9.8)) | FFQ | Total butter | 7.0 | Questionnaires at follow-up visits and annual mailed surveys. | CHD | 1,759 | 16.2 | 451 | 28,496 | 0.97 (0.59, 1.61) | Age, BMI, diabetes, hypertension, LDL-cholesterol, current estrogen use.(in women only) | 5 | |
| Multi-country (EPIC) | General population participants of the 8 European countries in EPIC InterAct case-cohort study; (mean 52 yrs.). | FFQ and food records | Total butter | 18.7 | Self-report, record linkage to health registers, pharmacy database and hospital admissions or mortality data & confirmation from another independent source for participants with <2 sources. | Diabetes | 25307 | 12.3 | 11,059 | 183,761 | 0.94 (0.90, 0.98) | Study center, energy intake, alcohol intake, gender, education, smoking status, physical activity, BMI | 5 | |
| Sweden | Women born between 1923–1950 and all men born 1923–1945 living in the city of Malmo (mean 58 yrs.) | FFQ and food records | Total butter & butter blends | 33.0 | Registry follow-up at screenings or interviews at follow-up. | Diabetes | 26,930 | 14.0 | 2,860 | 377,642 | 0.93 (0.89, 0.98) | Age, gender, education, method version, season, total energy intake, physical activity, smoking, alcohol intake, and BMI. | 5 | |
| Netherlands | Subjects 55–69 yrs., from the general population sampled from municipal population registries. | FFQ | All-cause mortality | 120,852 | 10.0 | 16,136 | 1,044,757 | 1.02 (1.00, 1.03) | Age, education, smoking, physical activity, multivitamin use, alcohol use, energy, e-adjusted MUFA and PUFA intake and fruit and vegetable consumption | 5 | ||||
| CHD | 120,852 | 10.0 | 2,689 | 1,044,757 | 1.03 (0.95, 1.11) | |||||||||
| Stroke | 120,852 | 10.0 | 842 | 1,044,757 | 0.99 (0.88, 1.10) | |||||||||
| United States | Women from NHS & NHSII (26–65 years) Mean 44 yrs. | FFQ | Total butter | NHS:11.4NHS II:9.8 | Validated supplementary questionnaire on symptoms, plasma glucose concentrations and treatment/medication for diabetes | Diabetes | 145,087 | 22 | 9,652 | 1,595,957 | 0.98 (0.94, 1.02) | Age, ethnicity, ancestry, smoking status, alcohol intake, dietary pattern (Alternative Healthy Eating Index score, and total energy intake, physical activity, family history of diabetes, history of hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, multivitamin use, postmenopausal status and menopausal hormone use. | 5 | |
| Finland | Men who resided in southwestern Finland and smoked ≥5 cigarettes per day at baseline (mean 58 yrs.). | FFQ | Total butter | 79.0 | Record linkage with National Register of Causes of Death using ICD classification | Cerebral infarction | 26,556 | 13.6 | 360,187 | 1.00 (0.98, 1.02) | Age, supplementation group, education, intakes of total energy, alcohol, caffeine, sugar, red meat, poultry, fish, fruit, fruit juices, vegetables, potatoes, whole grains, and refined grains, smoking, BMI, serum total cholesterol, serum HDL cholesterol, histories of diabetes and heart disease, leisure-time physical activity | 4 | ||
| Subarachnoid hemorrhage | 26,556 | 13.6 | 2,702 | 360,187 | 0.99 (0.91, 1.08) | 4 | ||||||||
| Intracerebral hemorrhage | 26,556 | 13.6 | 196 | 360,187 | 1.04 (0.98, 1.11) | |||||||||
| Finland | Finish citizens aged≥15yrs participating in the Mobile Clinical Health Examination Survey (mean 52 yrs.) | Diet history interview | Total butter | 67.5 | Record linking to nationwide social insurance register of diabetic treatment drug reimbursement. | Diabetes | 4,304 | 23.0 | 383 | 84,328 | 1.04 (0.94, 1.15) | Age, gender, geographic area, energy intake, smoking, family history or diabetes, BMI, | 4 | |
| Multi country (EPIC) | General population participants of the 8 European countries in EPIC (mean 52 yrs.). | FFQ and food records | Total butter & margarine | 33.0 | Record linkage with cancer or death registries, boards of health. In DE, follow-up mailings to participants and next of kin and inquiries to municipality registries, and regional health services. | All-cause mortality | 258,911 | 9.9 | 12,135 | 2,552,218 | 1.01 (0.99, 1.03) | Age and center-stratified, adjusted for gender, education, underlying dietary patterns, alcohol consumption, smoking, physical activity and prevalence of heart disease, cancer or stroke, | 4 | |
| Sweden | Women born 1923–1950 and men born 1923–1945 living in the city of Malmo (mean 57 yrs.). | FFQ and food records | Total butter | 49.0 | Linkage to Hospital Discharge and cause-of-death Registers and local stroke Register in Malmo. | CHD | 26,445 | 13.0 | 1,344 | 312,476 | 0.98 (0.94, 1.02) | Age, gender, season, method, education, energy intake, intake of vegetables, fruit and berries, fish and shellfish, meat, coffee and whole grains, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, leisure-time physical activity,. | 4 | |
| Stroke | 26,445 | 13.0 | 1,176 | 312,476 | 0.99 (0.94, 1.04) |
No RCTs were identified. Total participants N = 636,151; Total person-years = 6,539,822; Total events N = 62,008;
CHD: Coronary heart disease; CVD: Cardiovascular disease; DE: Germany; EPIC: European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; FFQ: Food-frequency questionnaire; ICD: International Classification of Diseases; IHD: Ischemic Heart Disease; NHS & NHSII: Nurses’ Health Study I and II;
*75th percentile of intake (not presented categorically);
** Exposure combined butter and margarine, author contact clarified that margarine intake was low in this population.
$ Maximum follow-up reported: Studies obtaining a quality score of 4 were primarily due to lack of reporting on loss to follow-up.
Avalos et al. and Goldbohm et al. reported results separately for men and women; Buijsse et al. reported results separately for diabetics and non-diabetics; Person-years for Buijsse et al. and Montonen et al. were estimated.
Fig 2Butter consumption and risk of all-cause mortality.
Within-study dose-response RRs were derived from reported linear effects or generalized least-squares trend estimation for studies reporting categories of intake, and pooled using both inverse-variance weighted random and fixed effects meta-analysis.
Fig 3Butter consumption and risk of any and total cardiovascular disease, stroke only and CHD only.
Data from 4 prospective cohorts with 175,612 participants and 9,783 cases for CVD, 3 cohorts of 173,853 participants and 5,299 events for stroke, and 3 studies of 149,056 participants and 4,484 cases of CHD. Within-study dose-response RRs were derived from reported linear effects or generalized least-squares trend estimation for studies reporting categories of intake, a pooled using both inverse-variance weighted random and fixed effects meta-analysis. CHD: Coronary Heart Disease; CVD: Cardiovascular Disease; D+L: DerSimonian and Laird random effects; I-V: Inverse-variance fixed effects; RR (95%CI): Relative Risk and 95% Confidence Interval.
Fig 4Butter consumption and risk of type 2 diabetes.
Within-study dose-response RRs were derived from reported linear effects or generalized least-squares trend estimation for studies reporting categories of intake, a pooled using both inverse-variance weighted random and fixed effects meta-analysis. D+L: DerSimonian and Laird random effects; EPIC: European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; I-V: Inverse-variance fixed effects; RR (95%CI): Relative Risk and 95% Confidence Interval.