| Literature DB >> 29474360 |
Marissa M Shams-White1,2, Mei Chung1, Zhuxuan Fu1, Karl L Insogna3, Micaela C Karlsen2, Meryl S LeBoff4,5, Sue A Shapses6, Joachim Sackey1,2,7, Jian Shi1,2, Taylor C Wallace8,9, Connie M Weaver10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Protein may have both beneficial and detrimental effects on bone health depending on a variety of factors, including protein source.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29474360 PMCID: PMC5825010 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0192459
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
RCT BMD and BMC results comparing isoflavone-rich soy protein, isoflavone-poor soy protein, and animal protein.
| Study Year [ref] | Outcome (units) | Soy Protein (SP) (SPI+/ SPI-) | Comparator Protein (CP) (AP/ SPI-) | Study Length | SP n | CP n | SP Mean at BL | CP Mean at BL | Net change | 95% CI | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kenny 2009 [ | BMD FN (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 25 | 22 | 0.809 | 0.8 | 0.50% | -1.79%, 2.79% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 24 | 22 | 0.861 | 0.8 | 0.49% | -1.18%, 2.16% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 1 y | 25 | 24 | 0.809 | 0.861 | 0.007% | -2.24%, 2.26% | >0.05 | ||
| Kreijkamp-Kaspers 2004 [ | BMD FN (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 1 y | 88 | 87 | 0.722 | 0.695 | 0.02% | -4.35%, 4.39% | 0.89 |
| Vupadhyayula 2009 [ | BMD FN (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 2 y | 57 | 52 | 0.873 | 0.881 | 0.03% | -1.23%, 1.29% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk | 2 y | 48 | 52 | 0.865 | 0.881 | -0.92% | -2.19%, 0.35% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 2 y | 57 | 48 | 0.873 | 0.865 | 0.95% | -2.40%, 4.30% | >0.05 | ||
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | BMD LS1-4 (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 0.944 | 0.941 | -0.21% | -7.29%, 6.88% | 0.958 |
| Kenny 2009 [ | BMD LS2-4 (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 25 | 22 | 1.127 | 1.11 | -0.55% | -2.54%, 1.45% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 24 | 22 | 1.218 | 1.11 | -0.82% | -2.60%, 0.97% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 1 y | 25 | 24 | 1.127 | 1.218 | 0.27% | -1.75%, 2.30% | >0.05 | ||
| Kreijkamp-Kaspers 2004 [ | BMD LS1-4 (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 1 y | 88 | 87 | 0.917 | 0.895 | 0.44% | -4.81%, 5.70% | 0.79 |
| Vupadhyayula 2009 [ | BMD LS1-4 (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 2 y | 57 | 52 | 1.085 | 1.104 | 0.56% | -0.71%, 1.83% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk | 2 y | 48 | 52 | 1.076 | 1.104 | 1.17% | -0.10%, 2.44% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 2 y | 57 | 48 | 1.085 | 1.076 | -0.61% | -6.00%, 4.78% | >0.05 | ||
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | BMD TH (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 0.853 | 0.871 | -0.002% | -6.28%, 6.28% | 0.512 |
| Kreijkamp-Kaspers 2004 [ | BMD TH (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 1 y | 88 | 87 | 0.861 | 0.831 | 0.49% | -3.60%, 4.57% | 0.27 |
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | BMD TB (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 1.05 | 1.05 | 0.000% | -5.03%, 5.03% | 0.986 |
| Kenny 2009 [ | BMD TB (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 25 | 22 | 1.106 | 1.086 | -0.17% | -1.06%, 072% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 24 | 22 | 1.129 | 1.086 | 0.20% | -.56%, 0.95% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 1 y | 25 | 24 | 1.106 | 1.129 | -0.37% | -1.25%, 0.51% | >0.05 | ||
| Vupadhyayula 2009 [ | BMD TB (g/cm2) | SPI+ | Milk | 2 y | 57 | 52 | 1.113 | 1.127 | -0.29% | -1.03%, 0.45% | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk | 2 y | 48 | 52 | 1.114 | 1.127 | 0.08% | -0.82%, 0.66% | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 2 y | 57 | 48 | 1.113 | 1.114 | -0.21% | -2.83%, 2.41% | >0.05 | ||
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | BMC TB (g) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 2023 | 2022 | 0.40% | -6.96%, 7.76% | 0.944 |
1 AP, animal protein; BMC, bone mineral content; BMD, bone mineral density; CI, confidence interval; CP, comparator protein; FN, femoral neck; LS, lumbar spine; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SP, soy protein; SPI-, isoflavone-poor soy protein SPI+, isoflavone-rich soy protein; TB, total body; TH, total hip.
2 Imputation was used to calculate net change, r = 0.50
RCT biomarker results comparing isoflavone-rich soy protein, isoflavone-poor soy protein, and animal protein.
| Study Year [ref] | Outcome (units) | Soy Protein Group (SPI+/SPI-) | Comparator Protein Group (AP/ SPI-) | Study Length | SP n | CP n | SP Mean at BL | CP Mean at BL | Net change | 95% CI | P-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alekel 2000 [ | BSAP (μg/L) | SPI+ | Whey | 6 mo | 24 | 21 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||
| SPI- | Whey | 6 mo | 24 | 21 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 6 mo | 24 | 24 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||||
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | BSAP (U/L) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 19.8 | 19.8 | -0.40 | -3.59, 2.79 | 0.796 |
| Evans 2007 [ | BSAP (U/L) | SPI+ | MPI | 9 mo | 21 | 22 | SPI: 32.6 | MPI: 25.3 | 0.75 | 0.13, 1.37 | 0.03 |
| Kenny 2009 [ | BSAP (U/L) | SPI+ | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 25 | 22 | 24.7 | 26.8 | 0.60 | -4.61, 5.81 | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 24 | 22 | 21.2 | 26.8 | -0.80 | -5.22, 3.62 | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 1 y | 25 | 24 | 24.7 | 21.2 | 1.40 | -2.68, 5.48 | >0.05 | ||
| Kreijkamp-Kaspers 2004 [ | BSAP (μg/L) | SPI+ | Milk | 1 y | 88 | 87 | 12.7 | 12.9 | -0.23 | -0.98, 0.53 | 0.55 |
| Alekel 2000 [ | NTx (nmol BCE/ mmol creatinine) | SPI+ | Whey | 6 mo | 24 | 21 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||
| SPI- | Whey | 6 mo | 24 | 21 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 6 mo | 24 | 24 | NR | NR | No sig diff between groups (p>0.05, data in figure only) | ||||
| Kenny 2009 [ | NTx (nmol BCE/ mmol creatinine) | SPI+ | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 25 | 22 | 37.5 | 37.5 | 0.90 | -7.83, 9.63 | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk+egg white | 1 y | 24 | 22 | 33.1 | 37.5 | -0.40 | -9.19, 8.39 | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI- | 1 y | 25 | 24 | 37.5 | 33.1 | 1.30 | -7.01, 9.61 | >0.05 | ||
| Murray 2003 [ | NTx (nmol BCE) | SPI+ | Whey+casein | 6 mo | 8 | 7 | 18.5 | 16.8 | -1.60 | -6.91, 3.71 | >0.05 |
| Vupadhyayula 2009 [ | NTx (nmol BCE) | SPI+ | Milk | 2 y | 25 | 30 | NR | NR | 2.79 | -1.98, 7.56 | >0.05 |
| SPI- | Milk | 2 y | 22 | 30 | NR | NR | 4.13 | -1.99, 10.25 | >0.05 | ||
| SPI+ | SPI+ | 2 y | 25 | 22 | NR | NR | -1.34 | -5.72, 3.04 | >0.05 | ||
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | DPD (nmol/mmol creatinine) | SPI+ | Non-soy AP | 1 y | 35 | 27 | 5.2 | 5.3 | 0.16 | -0.35, 0.66 | 0.888 |
| Evans 2007 [ | CTX (ng/mL) | SPI+ | MPI | 9 mo | 21 | 22 | SPI: 0.61 | MPI: 0.49 | 3.3 | 0.695, 5.905 | 0.02 |
1 BSAP, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase; CI, confidence interval; CTX, C-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; diff, difference; DPD, deoxypyridinoline; MPI, milk protein isolate; NR, not reported; NTX, N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; RCT, randomized controlled trial; sig, significant; SPI+, isoflavone-rich soy protein isolate; SPI-, isoflavone-poor soy protein isolate.
2Imputation was used to calculate net change, r = 0.50
Included bone outcomes of interest,.
| ◦ Bone mineral content (BMC): total body (TB) only |
1 The following outcomes were included outcomes of interest, but were not reported in the included studies: bone quality (e.g., via amplitude-dependent speed of sound (Ad-SOS), bone sialoprotein (BSP), tartrate-resistant acid phosphatase 5b, osteocalcin (OC), alkaline phosphatase (ALP), C- or N-terminal type 1 procollagen (C1NP or P1NP), hydroxyproline, pyridinoline (PYD)
2 Ratios of the biomarkers (e.g., with creatinine) were included as outcomes of interest
Study characteristics summary table, RCTs (N = 7).
| First author, pub year [ref] (country); study design | Participants | Total enrolled/ analyzed (N) [F%] | Baseline mean age (SD) | BMI (kg/m2) or body weight (kg), Mean (SD) | Group names | Sources of dietary interventions | Interventions (protein total daily dose) | Co-Interventions | BL Dietary Protein intake (g/d) Mean (SD) | BL Dietary Ca intake (mg/d) Mean (SD) | Study Duration (mo) | Outcomes assessed (Endpoint (1°, 2° or NR)) | Funding Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alekel 2000 [ | Healthy, peri-menopausal | 80/69 | Median 50.6 (NR) | Isoflavone-poor soy protein (SPI-), isoflavone-rich soy protein (SPI+), whey protein (Control) | Food and protein powder- mix w/ food or beverage | SPI groups: 40g soy protein | SPI+: 80.4 mg/d aglycone components/d | NR | SPI-: 883(349) | 6 | BSAP, NTX (2°) | combo (gov, ind) | |
| Arjmandi 2005 [ | Healthy post-menopausal | 87/62 | Crude NR | Soy protein (SPI+), Control | Food and drink mix | SPI+: 25g soy protein | SPI+: 60 mg isoflavones/d | SPI+: LSM: 75.8 (SE 3.6) | SPI+: LSM: 873 (SE:60) | 12 | BMD (TB, TH, LS), TB BMC, DPD, BSAP (1°) | combo (gov, ind) | |
| Evans 2007 [ | Healthy, post-menopausal | 61/43 | 62 (5) | Soy protein isolate (SPI+), SPI+exercise (SPI+Ex), | Beverage | SPI groups: 25.6g soy protein | SPI groups only: 91.2mg isoflavones/d | No sig diff between groups at BL, data NR | No sig diff between groups at BL, data by group NR; All: 1,582 (382) | 9 | BSAP, CTX (1°) | Combo (gov, ind) | |
| Kenny 2009 [ | Healthy, post-menopausal | 131/97 | 73.1 (5.9) | Soy protein + placebo (SPI-), soy protein+ isoflavones (SPI+), control protein +placebo (control), control protein + isoflavones | Powder +Tablets | SPI groups: 18g soy protein | Dietary counseling every 3 mo from research dietician | SPI+: 62.5 (13.7) | SPI+: 19.3 (7.7) | 12 | BMD (TB, FN, LS), NTX, BSAP (1°) | Gov | |
| Kreijkamp-Kaspers 2004 [ | Healthy, post-menopausal | 202/175 | Crude NR | Soy protein + isoflavones (SPI+), milk protein (placebo) | Protein powder- mix with food or beverage | SPI+: 25.6g soy protein | SPI+: 99 mg isoflavones/d | Soy: 99.6 (22.4) | Soy: 1623 (533.8) | 12 | BMD (TH, FN, LS) (1°), BSAP (NR) | combo (gov, NP) | |
| Murray 2003 [ | Healthy, post-menopausal | 39/30 | Crude NR | 0.5 mg E2+SPI (SPI+), 1.0mg E2+SPI, | Protein powder- mix with food or beverage | SPI+: 38g soy protein isolate | All: oral micronized E2 tablets (0.5–1.0mg); 1,200 mg Ca/d | NR | NR | 6 | NTX (1°) | Ind | |
| Vupadhya-yula 2009 [ | Healthy, post-menopausal | 203/157 | Crude NR | Soy protein without isoflavones (SPI-), Soy protein + isoflavones (SPI+), milk protein (milk) | Supplement-mix with beverage | SPI groups: 25g soy protein isolate | SPI+: included 90mg isoflavones | SPI-: 62.9 (1.9) | SPI-: 955.7 (56.4) | 24 | BMD (TB, FN, LS), NTX (1°) | Ind |
1BL, baseline; BMC, bone mineral content; BMD, bone mineral density; BSAP, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase; Ca, calcium; CI, confidence interval; CTX, C-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; diff, difference; DPD, deoxypyridinoline; E2, exogenous estradiol; F%, percent female participants; FN, femoral neck; LS, lumbar spine; LSM, least squared mean; MPI, milk protein isolate; NA, not applicable; NR, not reported; NTX, N-terminal telopeptide of type I collagen; RCT, randomized controlled trial; ref, reference; SD, standard deviation; SE, standard error; sig, significant; SPI, soy protein isolate; SPI+, isoflavone-rich soy protein isolate; SPI-, isoflavone-poor soy protein isolate; TB, total body; TH, total hip; Vit D, vitamin D.
SOE grading: equal amounts of soy, isoflavone-rich protein vs. animal protein intake by outcome.
| Outcome | Studies (N, (Ref)) | SOE Grade | Explanation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCTs | Cohort | |||
| BMD LS | 4 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Four RCTs with medium ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
| BMD TH | 2 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with medium ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
| BMD FN | 3 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Three RCTs with low ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
| BMD TB | 3 | 0. | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Three RCTs with medium ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
| BMC TB | 1 | 0 | D | We conclude a D level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on TB BMC loss in postmenopausal women. One RCT with medium ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
| Falls | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| Fractures | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| BSAP | 5 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy vs. animal protein intake on BSAP in postmenopausal women. Four RCTs did not find a significant difference between groups. One six-month RCT found the soy group had a significantly greater reduction in BSAP compared to the milk protein group. ROB was medium overall. |
| CTX | 1 | 0 | D | We conclude a D level of evidence that soy protein causes a greater reduction in CTX compared to milk protein in postmenopausal women. Only one, 9-month RCT with medium ROB examined this association and found a greater reduction in the soy protein group vs. the milk protein group. |
| DPD | 1 | 0 | D | We conclude a D level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on DPD in postmenopausal women. Only one, one-year RCT with medium ROB examined this association and did not find a significant difference. |
| NTX | 4 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between the effects of soy protein vs. animal protein intake on NTX in postmenopausal women. Four RCTs with medium ROB did not find a significant difference between groups. |
1 BMD, bone mineral density; BMC, bone mineral content; BSAP, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase; CTX, C-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; DPD, deoxypyridinoline; FN, femoral neck; LS, lumbar spine; NTX, N-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; Ref, reference; TB, total body; TH, total hip; SOE, strength of evidence
SOE grading: equal amounts of soy, isoflavone-poor protein vs. animal protein intake by outcome.
| Outcome | Studies (N, (Ref)) | SOE Grade | Explanation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RCTs | Cohort | |||
| BMD LS | 2 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with low ROB comparing isoflavone-poor soy protein vs. animal protein did not find significant associations. |
| BMD TH | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| BMD FN | 2 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with low ROB comparing isoflavone-poor soy protein vs. animal protein did not find significant associations. |
| BMD TB | 2 | 0. | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on BMD loss in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with low ROB comparing isoflavone-poor soy protein vs. animal protein did not find significant associations. |
| BMC TB | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| Falls | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| Fractures | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| BSAP | 2 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on BSAP in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with medium ROB comparing isoflavone-poor soy protein vs. animal protein did not find significant differences in the net changes in BSAP. |
| CTX | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| DPD | 0 | 0 | D | There is insufficient data to support a hypothesis: no study examined this association. |
| NTX | 2 | 0 | C | We conclude a C level of evidence that there is no significant difference between soy protein vs. animal protein intake on NTX in postmenopausal women. Two RCTs with medium ROB comparing isoflavone-poor soy protein vs. animal protein did not find significant differences in the net changes in NTX. |
BMD, bone mineral density; BMC, bone mineral content; BSAP, bone-specific alkaline phosphatase; CTX, C-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; DPD, deoxypyridinoline; FN, femoral neck; LS, lumbar spine; NTX, N-terminal telopeptide of type 1 collagen; Ref, reference; TB, total body; TH, total hip; SOE, strength of evidence