| Literature DB >> 31061018 |
Sabrina Ayoub-Charette1,2, Qi Liu1,2, Tauseef A Khan1,2, Fei Au-Yeung1,2, Sonia Blanco Mejia1, Russell J de Souza1,2,3, Thomas Ms Wolever1,2,4, Lawrence A Leiter1,2,4,5, Cyril Kendall1,2, John L Sievenpiper1,2,4,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) are associated with hyperuricaemia and gout. Whether other important food sources of fructose-containing sugars share this association is unclear.Entities:
Keywords: food sources of fructose containing sugars; fructose; gout; sugars; systematic review and meta-analysis; uric acid
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31061018 PMCID: PMC6502023 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-024171
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Summary of evidence search and selection. Flow of the literature search for the effect of food sources of sugar intake on incident gout and hyperuricaemia. Of the 309 studies initially identified, 294 were excluded based on title and/or abstract. The remainder were read in full by two independent reviewers; after, 12 were further excluded. Included in this analysis were three prospective cohort studies.
Characteristics of prospective cohort studies investigating food sources of fructose-containing sugar intake and incident gout
| Study, year (reference) | Cohort | Country | Participants | Incident cases | Age (mean years, range) | Follow-up (mean, range) | Dietary assessment | Food source of fructose-containing sugars | Frequency of administration of SFFQ | Quantiles | Exposure (servings/week, mean, range) | Serving size | Outcome assessment | Funding source* |
| Choi | HPFS | USA | 46 393 (M) | 755 | 52.5 (40–75) | 12 years | Validated SFFQ | SSBs. | 4 | Quintiles | ¼ to ≥14 | Not reported | Record linkage | Agency and industry |
| Choi | NHS | USA | 78 906 (F) | 778 | 49 (30–55) | 22 years | Validated SFFQ | SSBs. | 4 | Sextiles | ¼ to ≥14 | Not reported | Self-reported | Agency |
| Williams, | NRHS | USA | 28 990 (M) | 228 | 44.9 | 7.7 years (5.9–9.6) | Validated SFFQ | Fruit. | 1 (baseline) | Quartiles | ¼ to 2 | Not reported | Self-reported | Agency |
*Agency funding is that from government, university or not-for-profit health agency sources.
F, females; HPFS, Health Professionals Follow-Up Study; M, males; NHS, Nurses Health Study; NRHS, National Runner’s Health Study; SFFQ, semi-quantitative Food-Frequency Questionnaire; SSBs, sugar-sweetened beverages.
Figure 2Relation between intake of fruit, fruit juice and SSB incident gout. Estimates from most adjusted multivariate models accounting for food sources of fructose-containing sugars intake were used. The diamond represents the pooled effect estimate. Interstudy heterogeneity was tested using the Cochran Q statistic and quantified using the I2 statistic (I2 ≥50% indicative of significant heterogeneity). All results are presented as RR with 95% CI. OJ=orange juice. Other=other fruit juices. *The number of cases and participants are divided equally between the multiple entries of the study to ensure total count gives unique individuals. To overcome a unit-of-analysis error for studies appearing more than once in the same analysis, we readjusted the log-SEs to participants equally among the multiple comparisons. HPFS, Health Professionals Follow-up Study; NHS, Nurses’ Health Study; NRHS, National Runner’s Health Study; RR, risk ratio; SSB, sugar-sweetened beverage.
GRADE assessment of individual food source of fructose-containing sugars
| Certainty assessment | Study event rates (%) | Effect | Certainty | |||||||
| No. of studies | Design | Risk of bias | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Publication bias | Other considerations | Relative risk (95% CI) | ||
| Sugar-sweetened beverages intake on incident gout (follow-up median 17 years) | ||||||||||
| 2 | Observational studies | No serious risk of bias | No serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness* | No serious imprecision | Undetected† | Large magnitude of effect.‡ | 1533/125 299 (1.22) | 2.08 | ⊕⊕⊕◯ |
| Fruit juice intake on incident gout (follow-up median 17 years) | ||||||||||
| 2 | Observational studies | No serious risk of bias | No serious inconsistency | Serious indirectness* | No serious imprecision | Undetected† | None | 1533/125 299 (1.22) | 1.73 | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| Fruit intake on incident gout (follow-up median 9.87 years) | ||||||||||
| 2 | Observational studies | No serious risk of bias | Very serious inconsistency¶ | Serious indirectness* | Serious imprecision** | Undetected† | None | 983/75 383 (1.3) | 0.89 | ⊕◯◯◯ |
*Downgrade for indirectness as the study population is specific to a group of the population like professionals, nurses or runners.
†No downgrade for publication bias as publication bias could not be assessed due to lack of power for assessing funnel plot asymmetry and small study effect (<10 cohort included in our meta-analysis).
‡Upgrade for a large magnitude of effect (RR >2.0).
§Upgrade for a dose response gradient as the GLST dose–response analysis revealed a significant linear relationship between sugar-sweetened beverage intake and incident gout (p=0.0001).
¶Downgrade for very serious inconsistency, as the two studies included had opposite associations, and there was evidence of substantial interstudy heterogeneity (I2=94%, p<0.0001). Due to the small number of studies included in the analysis, subgroup analysis was not performed.
**Downgrade for serious imprecision, as the lower bound of the 95% CI (RR: 0.27) includes clinically important benefit (RR: <0.9), while the upper bound of the 95% CI (RR: 2.87) crosses the minimally important difference of 10% (RR: >1.1).
GLST, generalised least squares trend estimation models; RR, risk ratio.