| Literature DB >> 30021626 |
Gowri Raman1, Marissa Shams-White2,3, Esther E Avendano2, Fan Chen2,3, Janet A Novotny4, Aedin Cassidy5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is considerable interest in the impact of increased flavan-3-ol intake on cardiovascular disease (CVD) and diabetes outcomes. Through evidence mapping, we determined the extent of the evidence base to initiate a future systematic review investigating the impact of flavan-3-ol intake on CVD and diabetes outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Berries; Cardiovascular disease; Cinnamon; Cocoa; Diabetes; Evidence mapping; Flavan-3-ols; Lipids; Red wine; Tea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30021626 PMCID: PMC6052707 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-018-0764-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1Analytic framework for evaluating the association between flavan-3-ol and outcomes. Legend: Analytic framework displays the potential association pathway between flavan-3-ol and outcomes of interest
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|
| Populations: humans only | Populations: those including: |
| Adults 18+ years of age | Non-human subjects (e.g., in vitro, cell, stem cell, or animal studies) |
| Healthy adults | |
| Adults at an increased risk for cardiovascular disease (CVD) | Children and adolescents (< 18 years old) |
| Adults who had existing CVD | Pregnant or lactating women |
| Cancer survivors who were cancer-free at the time of the study | Adults with prior organ transplantation |
| All elderly | Adults with chronic, inflammatory, or autoimmune disease conditions (e.g., rheumatoid arthritis, polycystic ovarian syndrome, chronic kidney disease) |
| 100% smokers | |
| Participants in concurrent cancer or exercise trials | |
| Studies with < 10 subjects | |
| Interventions: | Interventions: |
| Foods, beverages, supplements, or extracts that described or defined flavan-3-ol content either as monomers or polymers | Did not evaluate a specific intervention (e.g., spice blend, dietary patterns rich in flavan-3-ol food sources) |
| Foods with no or low flavan-3-ol content (e.g., white chocolate, raisins) | |
| Example foods: fruits (e.g., apples, berries, grapes), dark chocolate, cocoa, teas, red wine) | |
| Foods with insufficient data to allow a reasonable estimation of flavan-3-ol content using standardized databases [ | |
| Studies must quantify flavan-3-ols consumed or provide sufficient data that allowed estimation of the flavan-3-ol content via standardized databases1 [ | Did not specify the type of wine (e.g., white, red, rice), alcohol, or chocolate (e.g., dark, white, or milk chocolate) in their questionnaires and/or reported results |
| Comparators of interest: | Comparators of interest: |
| Low or no flavan-3-ol content, including placebos | Studies that did not differentiate flavan-3-ol content (e.g., a study evaluating the effects of alcohol comparing red wine vs. de-alcoholized red wine) |
| Outcomes of interest: | Outcomes of interest: |
| Key clinical and intermediate outcomes (Table | Clinical and intermediate outcomes of interest (Table |
| Study designs of interest: | Study designs of interest: |
| Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) | Cross-sectional studies |
| Prospective cohort studies | Case reports |
| Case series | |
| Retrospective studies | |
| Systematic reviews and meta-analyses3 | |
| Reviews, lectures, opinion articles, news articles, proposed studies (i.e., no results reported) |
1For all interventions of interest when flavan-3-ols were not fully reported in an article, we utilized the recent USDA monomer and procyanidin databases or Phenol-Explorer databases to estimate flavan-3-ol content–either as monomers or procyanidin based on the intake values reported in each article.
2When outcomes were reported at multiple time points, only baseline and final follow-up results were extracted
3Though systematic reviews and meta-analyses were excluded during the screening process, their references were screened for any additional, relevant studies
Included outcomes of interest and minimum follow-up cutoffs
| ○ Cardiovascular disease (CVD) clinical outcomes (≥ 6 months follow-up), including acute coronary syndrome, angina, arteriosclerosis, atherosclerosis, atrial fibrillation, cerebrovascular disorders, coronary artery disease, heart failure, myocardial infarction, peripheral vascular disease, and venous thromboembolism1 |
1When outcomes were reported at multiple time points, the results reported at baseline and the final follow-up were extracted
Fig. 2Study Flow Diagram. Legend: Abstracts identified (n = 3194); Abstracts not meeting criteria (n = 2658); Full-text articles excluded after screening (n = 279); Full-text articles meeting study eligibility criteria (n = 257); Eligible randomized controlled trials (n = 223) and prospective observational studies (n = 34). RCTs = randomized controlled trials
Fig. 3Bar graph displaying the mean number of RCT and observational study flavan-3-ols articles published per year between 1985 and 2016. RCT = randomized controlled trial
Descriptive characteristics of eligible RCTs
| Total | RCT parallel | RCT crossover | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 223 (100.00) | 139 (62.33) | 84 (37.67) | |
| Blinding | |||
| Double-blind | 124 (55.61) | 87 (62.59) | 37 (44.05) |
| Single-blind | 40 (17.94) | 19 (13.67) | 21 (25.00) |
| Not blinded | 25 (11.21) | 14 (10.07) | 11 (13.10) |
| Not reported | 34 (15.25) | 19 (13.67) | 15 (17.86) |
| Mean age | |||
| < 50 years | 98 (43.95) | 57 (41.01) | 41 (48.81) |
| ≥ 50 years | 125 (56.05) | 82 (58.99) | 43 (51.19) |
| Baseline health | |||
| Healthy | 65 (29.15) | 29 (20.86) | 36 (42.86) |
| At risk for CVD | 127 (56.95) | 91 (65.47) | 36 (42.86) |
| Existing CVD | 11 (4.93) | 5 (3.60) | 6 (7.14) |
| Mixed | 11 (4.93) | 6 (4.32) | 5 (5.95) |
| Other | 9 (4.04) | 8 (5.76) | 1 (1.19) |
| Study region | |||
| Africa | 2 (0.90) | 0 (0.00) | 2 (2.38) |
| Asia | 29 (13.00) | 28 (20.14) | 1 (1.19) |
| Australia | 12 (5.38) | 6 (4.32) | 6 (7.14) |
| Eastern Europe | 5 (2.24) | 5 (3.60) | 0 (0.00) |
| Western Europe | 86 (38.57) | 38 (27.34) | 48 (57.14) |
| Middle East | 24 (10.76) | 23 (16.55) | 1 (1.19) |
| North America | 59 (26.46) | 34 (24.46) | 25 (29.76) |
| South America | 5 (2.24) | 4 (2.88) | 1 (1.19) |
| Mixed | 1 (0.45) | 1 (0.72) | 0 (0.00) |
| Intervention | |||
| Apple | 4 (1.79) | 1 (0.72) | 3 (3.57) |
| Berries | 36 (16.14) | 24 (17.27) | 12 (14.29) |
| Black tea | 16 (7.17) | 9 (6.47) | 7 (8.33) |
| Chocolate | 52 (23.21) | 27 (19.42) | 25 (29.76) |
| Cinnamon | 18 (8.07) | 17 (12.23) | 1 (1.19) |
| monomers | 9 (4.04) | 6 (4.32) | 3 (3.57) |
| polymers | 1 (0.45) | 1 (0.72) | 0 (0.00) |
| Grape | 7 (3.14) | 4 (2.88) | 3 (3.57) |
| Grape seed | 13 (5.83) | 9 (6.47) | 4 (4.57) |
| Green tea | 31 (13.90) | 26 (18.71) | 5 (5.95) |
| Mixed/other | 3 (1.35) | 3 (2.16) | 0 (0.00) |
| Tea | 8 (3.59) | 4 (2.88) | 4 (4.76) |
| Wine | 25 (11.21) | 8 (5.76) | 17 (20.24) |
CVD cardiovascular disease, N number, RCT randomized controlled trial
Fig. 4Heat map showing the distribution of RCTs by their intervention arms and most commonly evaluated outcomes. RCTs = randomized controlled trials
Fig. 5Heat map showing the distribution of RCTs by their intervention arms and less frequently evaluated outcomes. RCTs = randomized controlled trials