| Literature DB >> 29028268 |
Jean V Craig1, Diane K Bunn1, Richard P Hayhoe1, Will O Appleyard1, Elizabeth A Lenaghan1, Ailsa A Welch1.
Abstract
CONTEXT: An understanding of the modifiable effects of diet on bone and skeletal muscle mass and strength over the life course will help inform strategies to reduce age-related fracture risk. The Mediterranean diet is rich in nutrients that may be important for optimal musculoskeletal health. The aim of this systematic review was to investigate the relationship between a Mediterranean diet and musculoskeletal outcomes (fracture, bone density, osteoporosis, sarcopenia) in any age group. Ten electronic databases were searched. Randomized controlled trials and prospective cohort studies that investigated a traditional Mediterranean diet, published in any language, were eligible. Studies using other designs or other definitions of the Mediterranean diet were collated separately in an evidence map. Details on study design, methods, population, dietary intervention or exposure, length of follow-up, and effect on or association with musculoskeletal outcomes were extracted. The search yielded 1738 references. Data from eligible randomized controlled trials (n = 0) and prospective cohort studies (n = 3) were synthesized narratively by outcome for the systematic review. Two of these studies reported on hip fracture incidence, but results were contradictory. A third study found no association between the Mediterranean diet and sarcopenia incidence. Overall, the systematic review and evidence map demonstrate a lack of research to understand the relationship between the Mediterranean diet and musculoskeletal health in all ages. PROSPERO registration number IDCRD42016037038.Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; fracture; musculoskeletal; osteoporosis; sarcopenia; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29028268 PMCID: PMC5939869 DOI: 10.1093/nutrit/nux042
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr Rev ISSN: 0029-6643 Impact factor: 7.110
PICOS criteria for inclusion of studies in the evidence map and systematic review
| Parameter | Evidence map | Systematic review |
|---|---|---|
| Participants | People of any age, in any country, with any clinical condition, whose meals were either self-provided or provided as part of care in a residential home | |
| Intervention diet (interventional studies) | Participants advised to follow a dietary pattern labeled as “Mediterranean,” with or without provision of foods; diet not to have been modified for weight loss (such diets can alter dietary patterns); co-interventions such as exercise allowed, provided they were administered to all groups | Inclusion criteria were the same as those for the evidence map, but in addition, advice about MD to have addressed at least 8 core food categories, as follows: high consumption encouraged |
| Comparator diet (interventional studies) | Advice to follow usual diet or any dietary pattern other than MD, or no dietary advice | |
| Assessment of exposure to MD | A priori assessment, using any MD adherence index, or a posteriori assessment, using methods such as exploratory principal component analysis to identify commonly consumed combinations of foods that are then designated as comprising a MD | A priori assessment only |
| Outcomes | Fracture incidence (primary outcome), fracture risk score, osteoporosis or osteopenia incidence, BMD, BMC, bone turnover markers, sarcopenia or dynapenia or myopenia incidence, skeletal muscle mass plus strength or physical performance | |
| Study design | Any design | RCTs |
| Minimum duration of follow-up or timing of outcome assessment | Any follow-up period | ≥ 6 months for fracture incidence, BMD, BMC, sarcopenia incidence, and skeletal muscle mass plus strength or physical performance; ≥ 1 month for bone turnover markers |
Abbreviations: BMC, bone mineral content; BMD, bone mineral density; MD, Mediterranean diet; MUFAs, monounsaturated fatty acids; PUFAs, polyunsaturated fatty acids; RCTs, randomized controlled trials; SFAs, saturated fatty acids.
aHigh consumption defined as intake greater than or equal to the sex-specific median of the study population, or greater than or equal to a specified minimum number of servings.
bLow consumption or consumption discouraged defined as intake less than or equal to the sex-specific median of the study population, or less than or equal to a specified maximum number of servings.
cIt can be unclear which food categories have been assessed in an a posteriori approach, which hinders comparability across studies.
dRCTs were eligible whether randomization was done at the individual or the group level. Crossover RCTs were eligible if data from the first period of the crossover could be used; data from the second period were not eligible because of the risk of carryover of eating patterns from the first period.
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature search process. Abbreviation: MD, Mediterranean diet.
Figure 2Volume (no. of studies) and nature (study designs) of evidence identified in the systematic review and evidence map, grouped by outcome: 18 studies in total, some of which reported more than 1 outcome. Abbreviation: RCT, randomized controlled trial.
Studies included in the systematic review
| Reference | Country | Study design | Sample size (% female) | Characteristics of participants | Assessment of dietary intake | Assessment of Mediterranean diet adherence | Adjusted variables | Duration of follow-up | No. (%) experiencing event during study period | HR incidence (95%CI) per 1-unit increment in MD adherence score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone outcomes | ||||||||||
| Benetou et al. (2013) | Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, Sweden, UK | Prosp cohort | N = 188 765 (74.2) | Adults; mean age ± SD, 48.6 ± 10.8 y; cohort from EPIC study; inclusion criteria varied by center; excluded if key data were incomplete or if ratio of estimated energy requirements to energy intake was in top or bottom 1% of study cohort | Baseline FFQ pertaining to previous 12 mo (by interview, 2 centers; self-administered, 7 centers) or DHQ (1 center); 24-h dietary recall interviews in 5%–12% of participants (all centers) | Age, sex, BMI, smoking, CVD, cancer, history of DM, fracture, other health-related variables, menopause (pre/post), height, PA, total energy intake, education | Median 9 y | 1st incident fracture at hip: 802 (0.43) | 1st incident fracture at hip: 0.93 (0.89–0.98), | |
| Feart et al. (2013) | France | Prosp cohort | N = 1482 (62.9) | Community-dwelling older adults; mean age 75.9 (range, 67.7–94.9) y; cohort from 3C Study who completed a diet survey in 2001–2002 (baseline for this study); no exclusion criteria reported | Baseline FFQ (time period N/R) and 24-h dietary recall, both by interview | Age, sex, BMI, osteoporosis, calcium and/or vitamin D supplement, PA, total energy intake, education | Median 8 y | 1st incident fracture: at hip, 57 (3.9); at wrist, 73 (4.9); at vertebra, 43 (2.9); at any of above, 155 (10.5) | 1st incident fracture: at hip, 1.18 (0.99–1.39), | |
| Muscle outcomes | ||||||||||
| Chan et al. (2016) | Hong Kong | Prosp cohort (see | N = 2948 (50.8) | Community-dwelling adults; aged ≥ 65 y (mean age N/R for prosp cohort); able to walk or take public transport to study site; excluded if key data were incomplete or if energy intake was extreme (not defined) | Baseline FFQ pertaining to previous 12 mo by interview (frequency, usual portion sizes determined using pictures) | ↑ Fruit and nuts, | Age, sex, BMI, smoking, alcohol use, chronic diseases (no.), dementia, depression, PA, total energy intake, education, marital status/living alone | Mean 3.9 ± 0.1 y | Sarcopenia: All, 264 (9.0) M: 160 (11.0) F: 104 (6.9) | Sarcopenia: M: 0.98 (0.86–1.10), F: 0.96 (0.83–1.11), |
Abbreviations and symbols: BMI, body mass index; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DHQ, diet history questionnaire; DM, diabetes mellitus; EPIC, European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition; F, female; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; M, male; MD, Mediterranean diet; MUFAs, monounsaturated fatty acids; N/R, not reported; PA, physical activity; prosp, prospective; PUFAs, polyunsaturated fatty acids; SD, standard deviation; SFAs, saturated fatty acids; 3C Study, Three-City Study (prospective cohort study of vascular risk factors for dementia and cognitive impairment); ↑, higher intakes of foods treated as positive, assigned score of 1 if intake was above sex-specific study median (and 0 if below); ↓, higher intakes of foods treated as negative, assigned score of 1 if intake was below sex-specific study median (and 0 if above).
aMediterranean diet score of Trichopoulou et al. (2003);Scale of 0–9; 9 = maximal adherence to MD.
bMost-adjusted model.
Quality of evidence of systematic review studies assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa score (adapted)
| Reference | Selection criteria | Comparability (confounding) criteria | Outcome criteria | Total points awarded (0–9) | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Selection of exposed cohort (1 point max) | Selection of nonexposed cohort (1 point max) | Ascertainment of exposure (1 point max) | Assessment outcome not present at start of study (1 point max) | Comparability of cohorts (2 points max) | Adequacy of outcome assessment (1 point max) | Duration follow-up (1 point max) | Adequacy of cohort follow-up (1 point max) | ||
| Benetou et al. (2013) | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 6 |
| Feart et al. (2013) | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 5 |
| Chan et al. (2016) | 0 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 7 |
Figure 3Forest plot of most-adjusted hazard ratios for first fracture incidence associated with a 1-unit increment in MD adherence score (on a scale of 0–9, 9 indicating greatest adherence to MD), by fracture site. Abbreviations: IV, inverse variance; MD, Mediterranean diet; SE, standard error; w, with.
Interventional studies (randomized controlled trials, before–after study) included in the evidence map
| Reference | Country | Study design | Sample size (% female) | Characteristics of participants | Dietary intervention and comparator diet | Assessment of dietary intake, and of adherence to Mediterranean diet | Duration of follow-up | Types of outcomes and outcome measures | Reason for exclusion from systematic review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone outcomes | |||||||||
| Bulló et al. (2009) | Spain | RCT | N = 202 (49) 3 groups: n = 73 n = 70 n = 59 | Community-dwelling adults; mean age ± SD, 68 ± 6.2 y | Intervention [groups (1) MD + virgin olive oil, and (2) MD + nuts]: group training plus 3 monthly individual motivation interviews, personalized advice on MD (fruit, vegetables ≥ 2 s/d; legumes, nuts or seeds, fish/seafood ≥ 3 s/wk; soffrito ≥ 2 s/wk; abundant olive oil; cured/fatty cheeses, chocolate [dark], cured ham and/or red meat ≤ 1 s/wk; white meat instead of red/processed meat; wine 1 glass/d if usually taken; ad libitum consumption of eggs, low-fat cheese, whole-grain cereals, fat from oily fish/plants; avoidance of cream, butter, margarine, cold meat, sugared beverages, pastries, commercially baked products, potato chips), meals to be taken at table over a period of at least 20 min, supplied with either virgin olive oil ≥ 50 mL/d or nuts 30 g/d, according to group Comparator diet [group (3)]: advice to follow a low-fat diet of AHA, unclear if 1-time advice or group training plus 3 monthly individual motivation interviews (PREDIMED protocol amended year 4 of trial) | FFQ pertaining to previous 12 mo, at baseline and 1 y (type, frequency, portion size) MD adherence assessed using extended version of index of Martínez-González et al. (2004) | 1 y | Bone density/quality (BMD, broadband ultrasound attenuation, speed of sound, assessed twice by ultrasound of calcaneae); bone turnover markers in 24-h urine (DPD:Cr ratio, Ca:Cr excretion) and in fasting blood or serum samples (Ca, PTH, ALP isoenzymes, 25-OH vitamin D, OPG) | Type of MD (guidelines informing dieticians’ advice did not address cereals; allowed ad libitum but not actively encouraged, as per MD inclusion criteria) |
| Fernández-Real et al. (2012) | Spain | RCT | N = 127 (0) 3 groups: n = 42 n = 51 n = 34 | Community-dwelling men; mean age ± SD, 67.9 ± 6.3 y | Intervention [groups (1) MD + virgin olive oil, and (2) MD + nuts] and comparator diet (group 3): as above for study by Bulló et al. | FFQ previous 12 mo at baseline and annually (type, frequency, portion size) MD adherence assessment N/R | 1 y and 2 y | Bone turnover markers in blood or serum samples (total and uncarboxylated osteocalcin, CTX, P1PNP, Ca, phosphate) | Type of MD (same as above, for study by Bulló et al. |
| Santoro et al. (2014) | France, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, UK | RCT | Aim to recruit: N = 1250 | Adults; aged 65–79 y (mean age N/R); enrolled in the NU-AGE trial; free of disease with < 2 y prognosis; competent to make decisions; living independently | Intervention: 9 sessions of motivational interviews in 12 mo plus additional mail/email contact, personalized MD advice derived from dietary guidelines for the elderly from the participating countries (whole grains 4–6 s/d; vegetables ≥ 3 s/d [100 g/s]; fruits [fresh, frozen, dried, juice] ≥ 2 s/d; legumes 200 g 1×/wk; potatoes 3 s/d [50 g/s] or whole-grain pasta or rice 2–4 s/wk [80 g/s, raw]; dairy 500 mL/d, includes 30 g cheese [lean, low salt]; eggs 2–4×/wk; meat or poultry [lean, not fried] 4 s/wk [125 g/s]; fish [preferably oily] and seafood 2 s/wk [125 g/s]; nuts [unsalted, mixed] 2 s/wk [20 g/s]; fat ≤ 50 g/d [oil 20 g/d, margarine 30 g/d]; alcohol, if consumed, ≤ 2 g/d [M], ≤ 1 g/d [F]; other fluid ≥ 1.5 L/d; salt ≤ 5 g/d; sweets and sweet drinks, limit intake); daily vitamin D supplement, some MD foods provided by researchers Comparator diet: leaflet with general national dietary guidelines | Self-completed preformatted diary over 7 d, at baseline and at 1 y (recipes, food type, preparation, portion sizes using household measures) MD adherence assessment N/R; NU-AGE index being developed as part of this study | 1 y | Bone density/quality (BMD, assessed by DXA scan of total body, femur, and spine); bone turnover markers in blood or serum samples (25-hydroxy vitamin D, Ca, PTH) | Type of MD (intervention group received vitamin D supplement, while control group did not) |
| Seiquer et al. (2008) | Spain | Before–after | N = 20 (0) | Male adolescents; mean age ± SD | 3 d of usual (basal) diet, then 28-d intervention diet: individualized 7-d menu based on recommended nutritional intakes for Spanish adolescents and an MD informed by Serra-Majem et al. | Daily record sheets of consumed and uneaten (weighed) foods during intervention period MD adherence assessment N/R | 28 d | Bone turnover markers in 24-h urine (DPD, Cr, and Ca:Cr, Na:Cr, Ca:Na, P:Cr ratios) or in blood or serum samples (Ca, PTH, ALP) | Study design (not RCT or prospective cohort study) |
Abbreviations: AHA, American Heart Association; ALP, alkaline phosphatase; BMD, bone mineral density; Ca, calcium; Cr, creatinine; CTX, human cross-linked C-telopeptide of type 1 collagen; CVD, cardiovascular disease; DPD, deoxypiridinoline; DXA, dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry; F, female; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; g/s, grams/serving; M, male; MD, Mediterranean diet; Na, sodium; N/R, not reported; OPG, osteoprotegerin; P, phosphorus; P1PNP, procollagen I N-terminal propeptide; PREDIMED, Prevención con Dieta Mediterránea (RCT investigating effects of Mediterranean diet on cardiovascular mortality; PTH, parathyroid hormone; RCT, randomized controlled trial; s/d or s/wk, servings/day or servings/week; SD, standard deviation; u/s, ultrasound.
aAge data calculated for entire study population; original publication gives breakdown by groups, eg, by intervention group, age, sex, and/or quantiles.
bAssumed to be standard deviation (not reported if the figure given is the standard deviation or the standard error).
Observational studies (prospective cohort, case-control, cross-sectional) included in the evidence map
| Reference | Country | Study design | Sample size (% female) | Characteristics of participants | Assessment of dietary intake and of adherence to Mediterranean diet | Duration of follow-up | Types of outcomes and outcome measures | Reason for exclusion from systematic review |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bone outcomes | ||||||||
| Di Leo et al. (2000) | Italy (published in Italian, translated by native-speaking Italian) | Cross-sectional | N = 30 (100%) n = 15 cases; n = 15, controls | Adults; mean age ± SD, 36 ± 4 y; cases ate vegetarian diet rich in soya and legumes; controls ate MD, low in legumes relative to the vegetarian diet, without soya, and were matched for age and body mass | Self-reported food diary for 3 d incorporating weekend day (type, quantity), plus summary of the week’s food intake; MD adherence assessment N/R | N/A | Bone density/quality (cross-sectional area, trabecular area, cortical area, cortical thickness, strength strain index; assessed by pQCT at forearm) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study); type of MD (details of MD adherence assessment/food categories N/R) |
| Haring et al. (2016) | USA | Prosp cohort | N = 90 014 (100%) All assessed for fracture; n = 7961 (subset) assessed for BMD | Women, aged 50–79 y (mean ages in 3 age bands reported for full cohort, by MD adherence); enrolled in the WHI-OS; generally healthy; postmenopausal | FFQ previous 3 mo at baseline (frequency, portion size, food preparation practices, types of added fats); MD adherence using the aMED index created by Trichopoulou | 15.9 y (median) for fracture prevalence; 6 y for BMD | Fracture (incident hip fracture from medical records; total fractures excluding toes, fingers, sternum, clavicle from self-reported data); bone density/quality (BMD, assessed by DXA scan of femoral neck and total body) | Type of MD (aMed dietary adherence index does not address dairy intake) |
| Kontogianni et al. (2009) | Greece | Cross-sectional | N = 196 (100%) n = 100 were premenopausal; n = 96 were peri- or postmenopausal | Females; mean age ± SD, 48 ± 12 y | Self-reported food records over 3 consecutive days incorporating weekend day (frequency, portion size using standard household measurements); MD adherence index of Panagiotakos et al., | N/A | Bone density/quality (BMD, total body BMC, assessed by DXA scan of L2–L4 of lumbar spine) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Monjardino et al. (2012) | Portugal | Prosp cohort and cross-sectional | N = 1023 (54%), prosp cohort dataN = 1264 (53%), cross-sectional data | Teenagers; born in 1990, recruited to the EPITeen study at 13 y of age; recruited from public and private schools | FFQ previous 12 mo at baseline (frequency, but not portion size); MD adherence using KIDMED index of Sera-Majem et al., | 4 y | Bone density/quality (BMD, assessed by DXA scan of forearm) | Type of MD (KIDMED dietary adherence index does not assess meat intake apart from fast food [hamburger] consumption) |
| Rivas et al. (2013) | Spain | Cross-sectional | N = 200 (100%) n = 100 premenopausal; n = 100 postmenopausal | Women; mean age ± SD, 44.4 ± 11.7 y | FFQ previous 12 mo, by interview (type, frequency, portion size in household measures); MD adherence using MDS index of Trichopoulou et al., | N/A | Bone density/quality (BMD, assessed by DXA scan of calcaneous) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Whittle et al. (2012) | Northern Ireland | Cross-sectional | N = 489 (49%) | Young adults; mean age ± SD, 22.6 ± 1.7 y | Diet history previous 7 d, by interview (portion sizes estimated against photographs of known portions and commonly used household vessels); MD adherence using MDS index of Trichopoulou et al., | N/A | Bone density/quality (BMD, BMC, assessed by DXA scan L2–L4 of lumbar spine and femoral neck) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Zeng et al. (2014) | China | Case–control | N = 1452 (76%) n = 726 cases; n = 726 controls | Adults; mean age ± SD, 70.9 ± 7.3 y | FFQ previous 12 mo, by interview (frequency, quantity); MD adherence assessed using aMED, referenced as created by Trichopoulou et al. | N/A | Fracture risk (hip fracture confirmed by x-ray report in cases) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Muscle outcomes | ||||||||
| Chan et al. (2016) | Hong Kong | Cross-sectional (see other data in | n = 3957 (50%) | Community-dwelling older adults; mean age ± SD in those without sarcopenia, 72.2 ± 5.0 y, in those with sarcopenia, 76.2 ± 6.1 y; volunteers; able to attend study center | FFQ previous 12 mo by interview, at baseline (frequency, usual portion size determined using pictures); MD adherence assessed using MDS index of Trichopoulou et al., | N/A | Sarcopenia prevalence, using algorithm of AWGS, Chen et al., | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Hashemi et al. (2015) | Iran | Cross-sectional | N = 300 (50%) | Adults; mean age ± SD, 66.8 ± 7.72 y; living in Tehran; selected by cluster random sampling based on postcodes | FFQ (time period not specified), by interview (frequency, standard portion size); a posteriori classification of dietary pattern using principal component analysis, MD pattern had high factor loadings (> 0.4) in food groups such as olives and olive oil, low- and high-carotenoid vegetables, tomatoes, whole grains, nuts, fish, fresh and dried fruits, pickles | N/A | Sarcopenia prevalence, using algorithm of EWGSOP | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study), type of MD (not defined a priori) |
| Kelaiditi et al. (2016) | UK | Cross-sectional | n = 1914 subset 1 (100%) n = 949 subset 2 (100%) Subset 1 assessed for skeletal muscle mass and leg explosive power; subset 2 assessed for skeletal muscle mass and grip strength | Women; mean age ± SD, 48.3 ±12.7 y in subset 1 and 59.1 ± 9.3 y in subset 2; from the Twins UK registry if data on FFQ, skeletal muscle mass and skeletal muscle strength or power were available | FFQ (time period not specified); MD adherence assessed using MDS index of Trichopoulou et al., | N/A | Skeletal muscle mass (fat-free mass [kg], percent fat-free mass [fat-free mass (kg)/weight (kg) × 100], fat-free mass index [fat-free mass (kg)/height (m2), assessed by DXA scan]; skeletal muscle strength/power (isometric hand grip strength in dominant hand [kg] using dynamometer, arm muscle quality calculated as ratio of grip strength [kg] to mean arm lean mass [kg], leg explosive power [force and velocity of (principally) quadriceps muscle contraction] using Nottingham power rig) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study) |
| Rubio-Arias et al. (2015) | Spain (translated from Spanish using web-based translation, verified by an individual who speaks Spanish as a second language) | Cross-sectional | N=12 (100%) | Young adult females; mean age ± SD | Dietary intake assessment N/R; MD adherence using KIDMED index of Serra-Majem et al., | N/A | Skeletal muscle mass (total lean mass [kg] assessed by DXA); skeletal muscle strength/power assessed on 2 different days 7 d apart, preceded by standardized warm-up session (vertical jump tests × 2; counter movement and squat jumps using measurement platform; isokinetic strength of knee joint using dynamometer; kicking ball speed using radar; sprint speed 3 × 30 m, separated by 5-min periods; repeated sprint ability 8 × 30-m sprints, separated by 25-s recovery periods, assessed using photo-finish equipment) | Study design (not RCT or prosp cohort study), type of MD (KIDMED dietary adherence index does not assess meat intake apart from fast food [hamburger] consumption) |
Abbreviations and symbols: aMED, alternate Mediterranean diet score; ASM, appendicular skeletal mass; AWGS, Asian Working Group for Sarcopenia; BMC, bone mineral content; BMD, bone mineral density; DXA, dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry; EPITeen, Epidemiological Health Investigation of Teenagers in Porto (prospective cohort study); EWGSOP, European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People; F, female; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; M, male; MD, Mediterranean diet; MDS, Mediterranean diet score; MUFAs, monounsaturated fatty acids; N/A, not applicable; N/R, not reported; pQCT, peripheral quantitative computed tomography; prosp, prospective; PUFAs, polyunsaturated fatty acids; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SD, standard deviation; SFAs, saturated fatty acids; WHI-OS, Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study (investigated morbidity and mortality in postmenopausal women); YH, Young Hearts (prospective cohort study examining CVD risk factors in adolescents in Northern Ireland); ↑, higher intakes of foods treated as positive, eg, assigned score of 1 if intake above sex-specific study median (and 0 if below); ↓, higher intakes of foods treated as negative, eg, assigned score of 1 if intake below sex-specific study median (and 0 if above).
aAge data calculated for entire study population; original publication gives breakdown by group, eg, by intervention group, age, sex, and/or quantiles.
bAssumed to be standard deviation (it is not stated whether the figure given is standard deviation or standard error).