| Literature DB >> 28686188 |
Katie A Meyer1,2, Jonathan W Shea3.
Abstract
Studies implicate choline and betaine metabolite trimethylamine N-oxide (TMAO) in cardiovascular disease (CVD). We conducted a systematic review and random-effects meta-analysis to quantify a summary estimated effect of dietary choline and betaine on hard CVD outcomes (incidence and mortality). Eligible studies were prospective studies in adults with comprehensive diet assessment and follow-up for hard CVD endpoints. We identified six studies that met our criteria, comprising 18,076 incident CVD events, 5343 CVD deaths, and 184,010 total participants. In random effects meta-analysis, incident CVD was not associated with choline (relative risk (RR): 1.00; 95% CI: 0.98, 1.02) or betaine (RR: 0.99; 95% CI: 0.98, 1.01) intake. Results did not vary by study outcome (incident coronary heart disease, stroke, total CVD) and there was no evidence for heterogeneity among studies. Only two studies provided data on phosphatidylcholine and CVD mortality. Random effects meta-analysis did not support an association between choline and CVD mortality (RR: 1.09, 95% CI: 0.89, 1.35), but one study supported a positive association and there was significant heterogeneity (I² = 84%, p-value < 0.001). Our findings do not support an association between dietary choline/betaine with incident CVD, but call for further research into choline and CVD mortality.Entities:
Keywords: betaine; cardiovascular disease; choline; epidemiology; meta-analysis; systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28686188 PMCID: PMC5537826 DOI: 10.3390/nu9070711
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Characteristics of six prospective cohort studies reporting the association between dietary choline or betaine and cardiovascular disease.
| Author (Year) | Country | Study Sample | Study Period | Diet Assess-ment | Exposure Measure | Median Intake per Category (mg/Day) | Outcome Ascertain-ment | Outcome Measure | Sample Size | Total Person-Years | RR (95% CI) | Covariate Adjustment | Quality Score | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bertoia (2014) [ | United States | Women aged 44–69 at baseline (Nurses’ Health Study); men aged 40–75 at baseline (Health Professionals Follow-up Study) | 1990–2010 for women; 1986–2010 for men | FFQ | Total dietary choline (mg) and betaine (mg) | Women: (Choline: 246, 282, 307, 334, 377; Betaine: 67, 85, 101, 120, 159); Men: (Choline: 304, 348, 379, 415, 488; Betaine: 81, 102, 121, 144, 191) | Self-report with medical record adjudication | Peripheral artery disease | 116,852 (72,348 women, 44,504 men) | 790 (274 in women and 516 in men) | 1,302,032 (723,480 women, 578,552 men) | Q5 v Q1: Women: Choline: 1.07 (0.72–1.60); Betaine: 1.02 (0.69–1.52), Men: Choline: 1.24 (0.91–1.68); Betaine: 1.02 (0.77–1.35) | Age, total energy intake, race, smoking, hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, family history of MI, BMI, alcohol consumption, physical activity, aspirin use, postmenopausal hormone use (women only). | 6 |
| Bidulescu (2007) [ | United States | Men and women in the biracial (European- and African-American) ARIC cohort, aged 45–64 at baseline | 1987–2002 | FFQ | Total dietary choline | Choline: 109, 250, 323, 403 | Self-report with medical record adjudication; community surveillance of hospital discharge and death certificate data | Coronary heart disease (CHD) | 14,430 | 1072 | 202,020 | Q4 v Q1: Choline: 1.09 (0.79–1.50) | Age, gender, education, total energy intake, dietary folate, methionine and vitamin B6, race, diabetes, field center, menopausal status (women only), dietary cholesterol, dietary intake of saturated fatty acids, animal fat, dietary fiber, and animal protein. | 8 |
| Dalmeijer (2008) [ | Nether-lands | Female participants in a breast cancer screening sub-study of the Prospect-EPIC cohort | 1993–1997 (base-line) through 2004 | FFQ | Total dietary choline (mg) and betaine (mg) | Choline: 245, 282, 311, 356; Betaine: 162, 214, 257, 322 | Electronic hospital discharge database (Dutch Centre for Health Care Information) and death registries | CVD | 16,165 | 717 | 130,667 | Q4 v Q1: Choline: 1.04 (0.71–1.53); Betaine: 0.90 (0.69, 1.17) | Age; physical activity; smoking; diabetes; hypertension; BMI; hypercholesterolemia; systolic blood pressure; intake of total energy, protein, saturated fat, monounsaturated fat, polyunsaturated fat, alcohol, vitamin B2, vitamin B6, vitamin B12, folate, choline (betaine model), betaine (choline model). | 7 |
| CHD | 16,165 | 493 | 130,667 | Choline: 1.28 (0.86–1.91); Betaine: 0.95 (0.72, 1.25) | ||||||||||
| Stroke | 16,165 | 224 | 130,667 | Choline: 0.61 (0.33-1.13); Betaine: 0.83 (0.55, 1.25) | ||||||||||
| Millard (2016) [ | United States | Men and women from the African-American Jackson Heart Study, aged 21–94 at baseline | 2000–2004 (base-line) through 2011 | FFQ | Total dietary choline (mg) and betaine (mg) | Choline: 125, 239, 332, 730; Betaine: 40.6, 87.4, 128, 478 | Self-report; hospital discharge; physician office visit records | CVD | 3924 | 153 | 35,316 | Q4 v Q1: Choline: 0.58 (0.28, 1.20); Betaine: 1.07 (0.66, 1.73) | Age, gender, smoking, systolic blood pressure, antihypertensive medication, fasting plasma glucose, total- to HDL-cholesterol ratio, dietary methionine, total energy intake. | 6 |
| CHD | 3924 | 124 | 35,316 | Choline: 0.66 (0.27, 1.60); Betaine: 1.20 (0.68, 2.11) | ||||||||||
| Stroke | 3924 | 75 | 35,316 | Choline: 0.41 (0.16, 1.09); Betaine: 0.56 (0.28, 1.14) | ||||||||||
| Nagata (2015) [ | Japan | Men and women from the Takayama Study, aged 35+ at baseline | 1992–2008 | FFQ | Total dietary choline (mg) and betaine (mg) | Choline: Women: 307, 388, 442, 525, Men: 362, 445, 513, 614; Betaine: Women: 170, 239, 288, 377, Men: 208, 287, 350, 463 | Death certificates | CHD | 29,079 (15,724 women, 13,355 men) | 308 (154 women, 154 men) | Q4 v Q1: Women: Choline: 0.80 (0.40, 1.60); Betaine: 0.90 (0.53, 1.51), Men: Choline: 1.08 (0.57, 2.04); Betaine: 0.60 (0.37, 0.97) | Age; BMI; physical activity; smoking; education; marital status; menopausal status (women); vitamin supplement use; aspirin use; history of diabetes or hypertension; intakes of total energy, alcohol, saturated fat, polyunsaturated fat, folate, salt, and fruit. | 7 | |
| Stroke | 29,079 (15,724 women, 13,355 men) | 676 (349 women, 328 men) | 410,382 (227,083 women, 183,299 men) | Women: Choline: 1.02 (0.65, 1.60); Betaine: 1.04 (0.72, 1.49), Men: Choline: 0.98 (0.62, 1.55); Betaine: 0.84 (0.59, 1.20) | ||||||||||
| Zheng (2016) [ | United States | 80,978 women (NHS), aged 34–59 at baseline; 39,434 men (HPFS), aged 40–75 at baseline | 1980–2012 women; 1986–2012 men | FFQ | Dietary phospha-tidyl-choline (mg) | Phosphatidyl-choline: Women: 130, 154,171, 191, 236; Men: 140, 166, 187, 212, 261 | Mortality: Death certificates and medical records; Morbidity: Self-report with confirmation by medical record review | CVD, mortality | 120,412 (80,978 women, 39,434 men) | 4357 (2297 women, 2060 men) | 2,828,658 (2,078,089 women, 748,911 men) | Pooled over gender: 1.26 (1.15, 1.39), Women: 1.19 (1.05, 1.35), Men: 1.39 (1.20, 1.61) | Age, BMI, race, marital status, menopausal status and HRT (women), family history of CVD, smoking, alcohol consumption, physical activity, presence of diabetes, hypertension, or hypercholesterolemia, regular aspirin use, dietary energy, | 7 |
| CVD, incidence | 120,412 | 15,344 | 3,199,530 | 1.00 (0.95, 1.06) | ||||||||||
| CHD, incidence | 120,412 | 11,305 | 3,201,620 | 1.01 (0.95, 1.07) |
RR: relative risk; CVD: cardiovascular disease; CVD: coronary heart disease; PAD: peripheral artery disease; FFQ: food frequency questionnaire; BMI: body mass index; ARIC: Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities; EPIC: European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; HRT: hormone replacement therapy; NHS: Nurses’ Health Study; HPSF: Health Professionals Follow-up Study.
Figure 1Choline intake and CVD incidence.
Figure 2Betaine intake and CVD incidence.
Figure 3Phosphatidylcholine intake and CVD mortality.