| Literature DB >> 28542317 |
Lirije Hyseni1, Alex Elliot-Green1, Ffion Lloyd-Williams1, Chris Kypridemos1, Martin O'Flaherty1, Rory McGill1, Lois Orton1, Helen Bromley1, Francesco P Cappuccio2, Simon Capewell1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-communicable disease (NCD) prevention strategies now prioritise four major risk factors: food, tobacco, alcohol and physical activity. Dietary salt intake remains much higher than recommended, increasing blood pressure, cardiovascular disease and stomach cancer. Substantial reductions in salt intake are therefore urgently needed. However, the debate continues about the most effective approaches. To inform future prevention programmes, we systematically reviewed the evidence on the effectiveness of possible salt reduction interventions. We further compared "downstream, agentic" approaches targeting individuals with "upstream, structural" policy-based population strategies.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28542317 PMCID: PMC5436672 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
PICOS; Inclusion/exclusion criteria.
| Studies for all age groups from all populations, from high-, middle- and low-income countries | Studies on animals, cells and pregnant women |
| Systematic Reviews and primary studies evaluating the effects of actions to promote salt reduction by government policy or adopted in specific real or experimental settings | Studies evaluating the effect of a general or specific diet |
| Systematic and non-systematic reviews where actions to promote salt reduction were evaluated or compared | No comparisons of different actions to promote salt reduction presented |
| Primary outcome of interest was dietary salt intake (g/day). Studies including urinary sodium excretion as an outcome were converted to g/day. Secondary outcomes included changes in clinical/physiological indicators related to NCDs and behaviours associated with a healthy diet | Process evaluations reporting on implementation of interventions/policies without any quantitative outcome data; feasibility or acceptability without an assessment or primary outcomes (intake); studies on individuals as opposed to populations; data on cost only and BMI |
| Primary studies, RCTs, Systematic Reviews (SRs), empirical observational studies, natural experiments, and modelling studies, secondary analysis, and before vs. after interventions | Commentary/opinion articles and purely qualitative evaluations with no quantitative assessment |
Dietary counselling (individuals).
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hooper et al. (2002)45 | SR and meta-analysis of RCTs | US, Australia, New Zealand, UK | Dietary advice | Good | ||
| Appel et al. (2003)46 | Randomised trial | US | Dietary advice | Only the reduction in the established group differed significantly from that of advice only group. 24-hour dietary recall data indicated both behavioral interventions significantly reduced sodium intake in comparison with advice only group (P value = 0.01). | Good | |
| Brunner et al. (1997)47 | Meta-analysis of RCTs | UK, US, Netherlands and Australia | Dietary advice | Overall mean net reduction of 1.8g/day which is a 20% reduction in salt intake. The heterogeneity test was highly significant (P < .0005) for the 3- to 6-month trials, with a net reduction of 3.4 (95% CI = 45, 72) g/day. Summary effect of the two trials with SE was somewhat larger at 9–18 months than at 3–6 months. | Fair | |
| Francis & Taylor (2009)48 | Randomised control group study | US | Dietary counselling | Intervention salt consumption decreased significantly (P0.020) from record 1 to record 3. The reduction in control group participants’ sodium intake was not significant | Fair | |
| Parekh et al. (2012)49 | RCT | Australia | Health promotion–computer tailored advice | Fair | ||
| Petersen et al. (2013)50 | RCT | Australia | Nutrition education | Baseline reported salt intake: 6.8 ± 3.2 g/day | Fair | |
| Kokanović et al. (2014)51 | Before and after study | Croatia | Nutrition education | Difference in intake on initial and control examination statistically significant for intake of sodium p = 0.013. | Fair | |
| Heino et al. (2000)52 | Prospective randomized trial | Finland | Dietary counselling | Intervention children (+1.5g/day) | Poor | |
| Wang et al. (2013)53 | RCT | US | Dietary counselling | Intervention arm at one year follow-up found participants who consumed sodium greater than 5.8g/day declined from 75% at baseline to 59%. Those consumed higher than 3.8g/day declined from 96% (at baseline) to 85%. Average salt intake decreased from 7.5 g/day at baseline to 6.4 g/day at one-year (P<0.001). At one-year visit, salt intake was consistently reduced; significant difference only observed between males (7.6± 0.4 g/day) and females (6.0 ± 0.2 g/day; p < 0.001) | Poor |
Salt intake outcomes with interventions detailed in other publications.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laatikainen et al. (2006)25 | Cross-sectional population surveys | Finland | 1) Reformulation | Between 1979 and 2002 salt intake as measured by sodium excretion decreased from over 12.7g/day to less than 9.8g/day among men and from nearly 10.4 to less than 7.5g/day among women. In 1979 the most educated North Karelian men had lower salt intake compared to the least educated being 11.4 g in the highest education tertile and 13.1 g in the lowest tertile. Respectively, in 2002, the salt intake in southwestern Finland among women in the highest education tertile was 6.7g compared to 8.1g in the lowest tertile | Good | |
| Otsuka et al. (2011)101 | Longitudinal study | Japan | In stratified analyses by age, mean salt intake in men decreased 0.08 g/year among 40- to 49-year-olds, 0.09 g/year among 50- to 59-year-olds, 0.16 g/year among 60- to 69-year-olds, and 0.14 g/year among 70- to 79-year-olds. For women, mean salt intake decreased 0.08 g/year among 70- to 79-year-olds (P0.098). | Fair | ||
| Du et al. (2014)102 | Ongoing open cohort study | China | Labelling & media campaign | Salt intake decreased from 16.5g/day in 1991 to 11.8g/day in 2009 | Fair | |
| Miura et al. (2000)103 | Report | Japan | The National Health and Nutrition Survey in 2010 reported that the mean salt intake in adults was 10.6 g/day. There was an ~4 g decrease in comparison with that in 1972 (14.5 g), when salt intake was investigated for the first time in the National Nutrition Survey | Poor |
Modelling studies included in the systematic review.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cobiac et al. (2010)54 | Modelling study | Australia | 1) Voluntary reformulation | Good | |||
| Cobiac et al. (2012)55 | Modelling study | Australia | 1) Mandatory reformulation | Good | |||
| Nghiem et al. (2015)56 | Modelling study | New Zealand | 1) Dietary counselling | QALYs gained in order of effectiveness: | Good | ||
| Collins et al. (2014)68 | Modelling study | UK | 1) Health promotion campaign | Good | |||
| Gillespie et al. (2015)69 | Modelling study | England | 1) Mandatory reformulation | Mandatory reformulation (30% reduction in salt content) | Good | ||
| Wilcox et al. (2014)70 | Modelling study | Syria | 1) Health promotion | Good | |||
| Mason et al. (2014)71 | Modelling study | Tunisia, Syria, Palestine and Turkey | 1) Health promotion campaign (HP) | Fair | |||
| Pietinen et al. (2008)74 | Modelling study | Finland | Salt labelling | If the entire population were to choose low-salt breads, cheeses, processed meat and fish, fat spreads, and breakfast cereals, then salt intake could be lowered by 1.5 g in men and by 0.9 g in women. If everybody was to select high-salt products, then salt intake would go up by 1.9 g in men and by 1.2 g in women. Thus, the potential difference between the low and the high alternatives would be 3.4 g in men and 2.9 g in women. If all prepared foods had a reduced salt content, the mean salt intake would go further down by 2.3 g in men and by 1.7 g in women. Excluding under reporters, the mean salt intake was 11.1 g in men and would go down to 9.5 g if all men chose lightly salted products and further down to 6.8 g if also all prepared foods would have a lower salt content. In women, the respective numbers are 7.8, 6.7 and 4.9 g | Fair | ||
| Temme et al. (2010)75 | Modelling study | Netherlands | Labelling (health logos) | At baseline salt intake was 7.3 (95% CI 2.8, 2.9) g/day. For salt, in a 100% market share scenario (scenario II), salt reduction expected is 0.3g/day (4% reduction; non-significant). In scenario III, when all non-complying foods are replaced with foods complying with health logo criteria, sodium intake reduced by 23% to 5.5g/d (-1.8g/day). | Fair | ||
| De Menezes et al. (2013)76 | Modelling study | Brazil | Food Labelling | Salt would still be considered an important reduction, 36% in relation to the typical menus (TM), but it would be 7.6 g/day, which is above the recommended by the program (6.5 g/day). | Fair | ||
| Roodenburg et al. (2013)77 | Modelling study | The Netherlands | Labelling | A reduction of -23% for sodium was seen for sodium compared to the ‘actual scenario’. | Fair | ||
| Choi et al. (2015)41 | Modelling study | US | Reformulation (restaurants and manufacturers) | Good | |||
| Murray et al. (2003)79 | Modelling study | South East Asia (SEA), Latin America (LA), Europe (EU) | 1) Voluntary reformulation | Measures to decrease salt intake appeared cost effective. Legislation appeared more cost effective than voluntary agreements with assumption it would lead to a larger reduction in dietary salt intake. A 15% reduction in mean population salt intake could avert 8.5 million cardiovascular deaths | Good | ||
| Rubinstein et al. (2010)80 | Modelling study | Argentina | Salt reduction in bread | Good | |||
| Smith-Spangler et al. (2010)81 | Modelling study | US | 1) Voluntary reformulation | Good | |||
| Konfino et al. (2013)82 | Modelling study | Argentina | Reformulation | Good | |||
| Rubinstein et al. (2009)83 | Modelling study | Argentina | Reformulation in bread | Lowering salt intake in the population through reducing salt in bread was found to be the most cost-effective ($17 per DALY averted). Less salt in bread | Fair | ||
| Hendriksen et al. (2014)84 | Modelling study | Netherlands | 1) Reformulation | If salt intake is reduced to the | Fair | ||
| Ni Mhurchu et al. (2015)87 | Modelling study | New Zealand | Tax on major dietary sodium products | A 20% tax on major dietary sources of sodium might result in 2,000 (1300 to 2,700) DPP (6.8%) | Good | ||
| Asaria et al. (2007)104 | Modelling study | 23 low and middle income countries | Combined: | 8.5 million deaths would be averted by implementation of the salt-reduction strategy (15%) alone. Salt interventions: | Good | ||
| Dodhia et al. (2012)105 | Modelling study | England | Combined | 30% reformulation through agreement with the food industry. Interventions: | Good | ||
| Gase et al. (2011)106 | Modelling study | US | Combined: | Fair | |||
| Ha & Chrisholm (2011)107 | Modelling study | Vietnam | Combined | Fair | |||
| Barton et al. (2011) 120 | Modelling study | England and Wales | Salt legislation | Reducing salt intake by 3 g/day might reduce mean population systolic blood pressure by approximately 2.5 mm Hg preventing approximately 4450 deaths from cardiovascular disease | Good |
Fig 1Interventions classified on the upstream / downstream continuum.
Fig 2PRISMA flowchart.
Fig 3Effectiveness of interventions to reduce salt intake (empirical studies).
Forest plot of the empirical studies that were included in this systematic review. Negative values of salt reduction are interpreted as reported increase in salt consumption. For most combined interventions the sample size and confidence intervals were not reported. NA denotes not applicable or not reported.
Fig 4Effectiveness of interventions to reduce salt intake (modelling studies).
Forest plot of the modelling studies that were included in this systematic review. Because of the different modelling approaches in these studies, their uncertainty measures are not comparable. Therefore we do not plot them in this graph. Different scenarios were considered for different studies. NA denotes not applicable or not reported.
Dietary counselling (worksite/schools).
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| He et al. (2015)40 | Cluster RCT | China | Health education | At baseline, the mean salt intake in children was 7.3 (SE 0.3) g/day in the intervention group and 6.8 (SE 0.3) g/day in the control group. The mean effect on salt intake for intervention versus control group was −1.9 g/day (95% confidence interval −2.6 to −1.3 g/day; P<0.001). In adult family members the salt intakes were 12.6 (SE 0.4) and 11.3 (SE 0.4) g/day, respectively. During the study there was a reduction in salt intake in the intervention group, whereas in the control group salt intake increased. The mean effect on salt intake for intervention versus control group was −2.9 g/day (−3.7 to −2.2 g/day; P<0.001) | Good | |
| Cotter et al. (2013)57 | School based RCT | Portugal | Nutrition education | Fair | ||
| Katz et al. (2011)58 | School based RCT | US | Nutrition education | There were no statistically significant improvements in dietary patterns from baseline between the intervention (-0.23g/day) and control groups (-0.04g/day) for salt intake (p = .44) | Poor | |
| Aldana et al. (2005)59 | RCT | US | Health education | Fair | ||
| Chen et al. (2008)60 | Intervention control trial | China | Health education | Mean daily salt intake declined from 16.0 to 10.6 g d-1 in the intervention factory, compared with the control factory from 16.9 to 15.4 g d-1, with the net reduction of 3.9 g d-1, which was significantly different (P < 0.05). | Fair | |
| Levin et al. (2009)61 | Worksite based dietary intervention | US | Dietary counselling | Intervention group participants significantly increased the reported intake and mean intake (P = 0.04) of salt compared to the control group. | Fair |
Dietary counselling (community).
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yanek et al. (2001)62 | RCT | US | Health promotion–education | Salt (g/day) | Fair | |
| Cappuccio et al. (2006)63 | Community-based cluster randomised trial | Ghana | Health education | Sodium intake as measured by sodium excretion fell in four out of six villages in the intervention group and in 5 out of six villages in the control group. The net intervention effect was non-significant. | Fair | |
| Takahashi et al. (2006)64 | Community based open randomizer controlled cross-over trial | Japan | Dietary education | Salt intake as measured by sodium excretion, collected at two points, in the intervention group decreased by 2.8 (95% CI: -3.6, -2.1) and 0.6 g/day (-1.4, +0.2) in the control group. This difference in change between the two groups was statistically significant (P < 0.001). Dietary counselling for 1 year reduced salt intake by 2.2 g/day as measured by 24-h urinary sodium | Fair | |
| Robare et al. (2010)65 | Community based intervention trial | US | Nutrition education | Salt intake decreased by 0.3g/day (7.8 to 7.5g/day) from baseline to 6 months follow up which was not significant (p = 0.30). When comparing baseline with 12 months follow up, salt intake decreased by 0.7g/day (7.8 to 7.2g/day) which was significant (p = 0.03) | Fair | |
| Van de Vijver et al. (2012)66 | Review | Ghana and China | Health education | Fair |
Media campaigns.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shankar et al. (2012)67 | Cross-sectional | UK | Salt campaign (and potential effect on reformulation and table salt use) | The results are consistent with a previous hypothesis that the campaign reduced salt intakes by approximately 10%. The impact is shown to be stronger among women than among men. | Fair |
Labelling.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Babio et al. (2013)72 | Randomised cross-over trial | Spain | Labelling | Participants using the multiple-traffic-light GDA system chose significantly less salt (0.4g/day; P <0.001) than those using the monochrome GDA labels | Poor | |
| Elfassy et al. (2015)73 | Cross-sectional | US | Labelling (use) | Daily sodium intake was not lower in those who reported frequent vs non-frequent use of the NF label for sodium information (7.7g/day vs 7.6g/day; P = 0.924) | Poor |
Reformulation.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chang et al. (2006)78 | Cluster RCT | Taiwan | Reformulation–low sodium salt | The incidence of CVD-related deaths was 13.1 per 1000 persons (27 deaths in 2057 person-years) and 20.5 per 1000 (66 deaths in 3218 person years) for the experimental and control groups, respectively A significant reduction in CVD mortality (age-adjusted hazard ratio: 0.59; 95% CI: 0.37, 0.95) was observed in the experimental group. Persons in the experimental group lived 0.3–0.90 y longer | Fair |
Taxes.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thow et al. (2014)85 | Systematic Review | US (with UK data) | Sodium tax | A modelling study predicted that a sodium tax increasing the price of salty foods by 40% would reduce sodium consumption by 6% | Fair | |
| Niebylski et al. (2015)86 | SystematicReview | France and US | 1) Tax on salty snacks | 1) Modelling study of tax on chips/salty snacks on energy intake in US. Predicted a 1% tax had no effect on consumption or body weight | Fair |
Multi-component interventions.
| Study | Study type | Geographical scope | Aim and main outcomes | Policies analysed | Relevant results | Quality assessment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| He et al. (2014)88 | Comprehensive analysis | UK | 1) Reformulation | 15% decrease, there have been a steady fall in salt intake at a rate of ~2% per year since the introduction of the salt reduction strategy. The 0.9g/day reduction in salt intake achieved by 2008 led to E 6000 fewer CVD deaths per year. | Good | |
| Mozaffarian et al. (2012)89 | Systematic review | Finland and China | 1) Education | Good | ||
| Fattore et al. (2014)43 | Systematic review | Australia, US and Vietname | 1) Voluntary reformulation, mandatory reformulation and dietary advice | 1) | Fair | |
| He & MacGregor (2009)90 | Review | Japan, Finland and UK | 1) Reformulation to reduce the salt content of all foods | Fair | ||
| Pietinen et al. (2010)91 | Before and after study | Finland | 1) Education | 1981; Eastern Finland: salt intake was about 13 g in men and 11 g in women. Salt intake has decreased continuously to a level of about 9 g in men and 7 g in women in 2007 | Fair | |
| Wang et al. (2011)92 | Literature review | US | 1) Reformulation | Fair | ||
| Webster et al. (2011)93 | Review | Finland, France, Japan and UK | 1) Reformulation | Fair | ||
| Wang & Bowman (2013)94 | Literature review | US, UK | 1) reducing the sodium content of all foods | Fair | ||
| He et al. (2014)95 | Cross-sectional | England | Combined | From 2003 to 2011, salt intake decreased by 1.4 g/day (15%, p<0.05 for the downward trend). From 2003 to 2011, stroke mortality decreased from 128/1 000 000 to 82/1 000 000 (36% reduction, p<0.001) and IHD mortality decreased from 423/1 000 000 to 272/1 000 000 (36% reduction, p<0.001). | Fair | |
| Enkhtungalag et al. (2015)96 | Before and after study | Mongolia | Education on salt consumption and provision of reduced salt foods | Salt intake reduced from 11.5g/day in 2011 to 8.7g/day in 2013 | Fair | |
| Trieu et al. (2015)24 | Systematic review | 75 countries | Labelling, mass media campaigns, education, reformulation | Fair | ||
| Luft et al. (1997)97 | Review | Finland and US | 1) Nutrition education | Poor | ||
| Mohan et al. (2009)98 | Review | UK | 1) Reformulation | Poor | ||
| He & MacGregor et al. (2010)99 | Comprehensive review | Japan, Finland and UK | 1) Reformulation | Poor | ||
| Wyness et al. (2012)100 | Literature review | UK | 1) Health promotion campaigns | • 2000–2001: salt intake = 9.5g/day | Poor |