| Literature DB >> 31826724 |
Qi Liu1,2, Sabrina Ayoub-Charette1,2, Tauseef Ahmad Khan1,2, Fei Au-Yeung1,2, Sonia Blanco Mejia1,2, Russell J de Souza1,2,3, Thomas M S Wolever1,2,4,5, Lawrence A Leiter1,2,4,5, Cyril W C Kendall1,2,6, John L Sievenpiper1,2,4,5.
Abstract
Background Sugar-sweetened beverages are associated with hypertension. We assessed the relation of important food sources of fructose-containing sugars with incident hypertension using a systematic review and meta-analysis of prospective cohort studies. Methods and Results We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane (through December week 2, 2018) for eligible studies. For each food source, natural log-transformed risk ratios (RRs) for incident hypertension were pooled using pair-wise meta-analysis and linear and nonlinear dose-response meta-analyses. Certainty in our evidence was assessed using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation. We identified 26 reports, including 15 prospective cohorts (930 677 participants; 363 459 cases). Sugar-sweetened beverages showed harmful (RRper-355-mL, 1.10 [95% CI, 1.08, 1.12]) whereas fruit (RRper-240-g, 0.94 [95% CI, 0.96, 0.99]) and yogurt showed protective associations (RRper-125-g, 0.95 [95% CI, 0.94, 0.97]) with incident hypertension throughout the dose range. One hundred percent fruit juice showed a protective association only at moderate doses (RRat-100-mL, 0.97 [95% CI, 0.94, 0.99]). The pair-wise protective association of dairy desserts was not supported by linear dose-response analysis. Fruit drinks or sweet snacks were not associated with hypertension. Certainty of the evidence was "low" for sugar-sweetened beverages, 100% fruit juice, fruit, and yogurt and "very low" for fruit drinks, sweet snacks, and dairy desserts. Conclusions The harmful association between sugar-sweetened beverages and hypertension does not extend to other important food sources of fructose-containing sugars. Further research is needed to improve our estimates and better understand the dose-response relationship between food sources of fructose-containing sugars and hypertension. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov/. Unique identifier: NCT02702375.Entities:
Keywords: SSBs; dairy; fruit; fruit juice; hypertension; yogurt
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31826724 PMCID: PMC6951071 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.118.010977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1Flow of the literature search.
Cohort Characteristics
| Study, Year (reference) | Cohort | Population at Baseline | Country | Participants | Incident Cases | Age (y) | Years Range | Duration (mean or median) | Dietary Intake Assessment | Frequency of Administration | Quantile Division | Exposure (median or range) | Serving Size | Outcome Assessment | Funding Sources |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sugar‐sweetened beverages (SSBs) | |||||||||||||||
| Barrio‐Lopez et al, 2013 | SUN | Nonhypertensive; does not meet any of the criteria for MetS; not abnormal energy intake | Spain | 8157 | 1464 | 36 (mean) | 2004 to 2012 | 6 y | Validated FFQ | Every 2 y | Quintile |
(change in consumption) | 330 mL | Validated self‐report | Agency |
| Cohen et al, 2012 | NHS | Nonhypertensive | US | 88 540 (F) | 42 022 | 38 to 53 | 1980 to 2008 | 28 y | Validated FFQ | Every 4 y | Quartile | <1/mo to ≥1/d | Bottle, glass, or can | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| NHSII | 97 991 (F) | 21 873 | 31 to 40 | 1991 to 2007 | 16 y | ||||||||||
| HPFS | 37 360 (M) | 13 439 | 42 to 63 | 1986 to 2008 | 22 y | ||||||||||
| Dhingra et al, 2007 | FOC | Nonhypertensive; no baseline MetS, no prevalent CVD | US | 2803 | 1377 | 53 (mean) | 1987 to 2001 | 4 y | Validated FFQ | Years 0,4 | Quartile | 0 to ≥2 servings/d | 12 oz | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Duffey et al, 2010 | CARDIA | Nonhypertensive; no baseline MetS | US | 2639 | 609 | 18 to 30 | 1986 to 2006 | 20 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,7 | Quartile | n/a | n/a | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| Kang et al, 2017 | KoGES | Nonhypertensive; no baseline MetS | Korea | 4591 | 1309 | 40 to –69 | (2001–2002) to (2009–2010) | 10 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 2 y | Quartile | 0 to ≥4 servings/wk | 250 mL | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Kwak et al, 2018 | KoGES | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; no diabetes mellitus; no cancer | Korea | 5775 | 1175 | 40 to 69 | (2001–2002) to (2009–2010) | 10 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 2 y | Quartile | 0 to 3.5 servings/wk | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Mirmiran et al, 2015 | TLGS | Nonhypertensive; within ±3 SD of energy intake | Iran | 424 | 47 | 14 (mean) | (2006–2008) to (2009–2011) | 3.6 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 3 y | Quartile | 1.12 to 100 mL/d | 250 mL | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Sayon‐Orea et al, 2015 | SUN | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | Spain | 13 843 | 1308 | 36 (mean) | 1999 to 2010 | 8.1 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,6 | Tertile | 0 to ≥7 servings/wk | 6.7 oz | Validated self‐report | Agency |
| Weng et al, 2013 | ARIC | Nonhypertensive; no abnormal energy intake | US | 9913 | 2853 | 45 to 64 | (1987–1989) to (1996–1998) | 9 y | Validated FFQ | Years 0,3 | Tertile | 0 to ≥1 serving/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Winkelmayer et al, 2005 | NHS | Nonhypertensive | US | 61 091 (F) | 19 541 | 30 to 55 | 1990 to 2002 | 12 y | Validated FFQ | Every 4 y | Quartile | <1 serving/d to ≥4/d | Serving size as indicated on FFQ | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| NHSII | 94 503 (F) | 13 536 | 25 to 42 | 1991 to 2003 | <1 serving/d to (4–5)/d | ||||||||||
| Fruit | |||||||||||||||
| Auerbach et al, 2017 | WHI | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | US | 80 539 (F) | 46 202 | 50 to 79 | (1993–1998) to (2004 to 2005) | 7.8 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 6 to 12 mo | Quintile | 0.3 to 2.4 servings/d | n/a | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| Borgi et al, 2016 | NHS | Nonhypertensive | US | 39 164 (F) | 35 375 | 30 to 55 | 1984 to 010 | 26 y | Validated FFQ | 1984, 1986, every 4 y after | Quintile | ≤4 servings/wk to ≥4 servings/d | Dependent on type of fruit | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| NHSII | 63 885 (F) | 25 246 | 25 to 42 | 1991 to 2011 | 20 y | ||||||||||
| HPFS | 20 010 (M) | 16 752 | 40 to 75 | 1986 to 2010 | 24 y | ||||||||||
| Kim et al, J Acad Nutr Diet, 2017 | KoGES | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; no cancer; no abnormal energy intake | Korea | 2005 (M) | 606 | 40 to 69 | (2001–2002) to (2009–2010) | 8 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 2 y | Quartile | 0 to ≥4 servings/d | 100 g | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| 2174 (F) | 552 | ||||||||||||||
| Koochakpoor et al, 2018 | TLGS (case‐cohort analysis) | Nonhypertensive; no MetS at baseline; no CVD | Iran |
640 cases | 42 | 2002 to 2014 | 12 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 3 y | Quartile | n/a | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency | |
| Nunez‐Cordoba et al, 2009 | SUN | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; not abnormal energy intake | Spain | 8594 | 426 | 20 to 95 | 1999 to 2006 | 4.1 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 2 y | Quintile | ≤1 to >4 servings/d | Serving size as indicated on FFQ | Validated self‐report | Agency |
| Psaltopoulou et al, 2004 | EPIC | Nonhypertensive | Greece | 20 343 | 5424 | 20 to 86 | 1994 to 1999 | 5 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 3 to 5 y | Per SD increment | <1 to >3 servings/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Steffen et al, 2005 | CARDIA | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | US | 4304 | 997 | 18 to 30 | 1986 to 2001 | 15 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,7 | Quintile | <0.2 to >1.5 times/d | Frequency not servings | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Tsubota‐Utsugi et al, 2011 | Ohasama | Nonhypertensive; within ±3 SD of energy intake | Japan | 745 | 222 | ≥35 | 1998 to 2002 | 4 y | Validated FFQ | 1 (baseline) | Quartile | ≤38.40 to ≥100.03 g/d | n/a | Self‐reported | Agency |
| Wang et al, 2012 | WHS | Nonhypertensive; no cancer; no CVD | US | 28 082 (F) | 13 633 | 39 to 89 | (1992–1995) to 2007 | 12.9 y | Validated FFQ | 1 (baseline) | Quintile | <0.5 to ≥3 servings/d | n/a | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency and Industry |
| Weng et al, 2013 | ARIC | Nonhypertensive; no abnormal energy intake | US | 9913 | 2853 | 45 to 64 | (1987–1989) to (1996–1998) | 9 y | Validated FFQ | Years 0,3 | Quintile | n/a | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Yogurt | |||||||||||||||
| Alonso et al, 2009 | ARIC | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; no diabetes mellitus; no abnormal energy intake | US | 8208 | 2399 | 45 to 64 | (1987–1989) to (1996–1998) | 9 y | Validated FFQ | Every 3 y | Tertile | 0.01 to 1.3 servings/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Buendia et al, 2018 | NHS | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; no diabetes mellitus; no cancer; not abnormal energy intake | US | 69 298 | 41 934 | 45 (mean) | 1980 to 2010 | 30 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 4 y | Quintile | <1 serving/mo to ≥5 servings/wk | 1 cup | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency and industry |
| NHSII | 84 368 | 26 282 | 36 (mean) | 1989 to 2009 | 20 y | ||||||||||
| HPFS | 30 512 | 14 166 | 51 (mean) | 1986 to 2010 | 24 y | ||||||||||
| Engberink et al, 2009 | MORGEN | Nonhypertensive | Netherlands | 3454 | 713 | 20 to 65 | (1993–1997) to (1998–2002) | 5 y | Validated SFFQ | 1 (baselines) | Quartile | 12 to 122 g/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Kim et al, Brit J Nutr, 2017 | KoGES | Nonhypertensive; no MetS at baseline; no CVD; no cancer | Korea | 4335 | 1556 | 40 to 69 | (2001–2002) to (2009–2010) | 10 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,4 | Quartile | 0 to ≥4 servings/wk | 140 mL | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Steffen et al, 2005 | CARDIA | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | US | 4304 | 997 | 18 to 30 | 1986 to 2001 | 15 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,7 | Tertile | <0.1 to >0.5 times/wk | Frequency not servings | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Wang et al, 2008 | WHS | Nonhypertensive, no cancer, no CVD, not “implausible” energy intake | US | 28 886 (F) | 8710 | 54 (mean) | (1992–1995) to 2005 | 10 y | Validated SFFQ | 1 (baseline) | Quintile | <1 serving/mo to ≥1 servings/d | Serving size as indicated on SFFQ | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| Wang et al, 2015 | FHS | Nonhypertensive | US | 2340 | 1026 | 52 (mean) | 1991 to 2008 | 14.6 y | Validated FFQ | At each exam | Per 1 serving/wk increment | 0 to 4.000 servings/wk | 227 g | Independent blind assessment | Agency and industry |
| Dairy desserts | |||||||||||||||
| Alonso et al, 2009 | ARIC | Nonhypertensive; no CVD; no diabetes mellitus; no abnormal energy intake | US | 8208 | 2399 | 45 to 64 | (1987–1989) to (1996–1998) | 9 y | Validated FFQ | Every 3 y | Tertile | 0.04 to 1.5 servings/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Steffen et al, 2005 | CARDIA | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | US | 4304 | 997 | 18 to 30 | 1986 to 2001 | 15 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,7 | Quintile | <0.1 to >2.2 times/wk | Frequency not servings | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Wang et al, 2008 | WHS | Nonhypertensive, no cancer, no CVD, not “implausible” energy intake | US | 28 886 (F) | 8710 | 54 (mean) | (1992–1995) to 2005 | 10 y | Validated SFFQ | 1 (baseline) | Quintile | <1 serving/mo to ≥1 servings/d | Serving size as indicated on SFFQ | Self‐reported Physician Diagnosed | Agency |
| 100% fruit juice | |||||||||||||||
| Auerbach et al, 2017 | WHI | Nonhypertensive; not abnormal energy intake | US | 80 539 (F) | 46 202 | 50 to 79 | (1993–1998) to (2004–2005) | 7.8 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 6 to 12 mo | Quintile | 0 to 7.8 oz/d | 100 oz | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| Duffey et al, 2010 | CARDIA | Nonhypertensive; no baseline MetS | US | 2639 | 609 | 18 to 30 | 1986 to 2006 | 20 y | Validated SFFQ | Years 0,7 | Quartile | n/a | 8 oz | Self‐reported Physician diagnosed | Agency |
| Fruit drinks | |||||||||||||||
| Mirmiran et al, 2015 | TLGS | Nonhypertensive; not ±3 SD of energy intake | Iran | 424 | 47 | 14 (mean) | (2006–2008) to (2009–2011) | 3.6 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 3 y | Quartile | 1.12 to 100 mL/d | 250 mL | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
| Sweet snacks | |||||||||||||||
| Asghari et al, 2016 | TLGS | Nonhypertensive; not ±3 SD of energy intake | Iran | 439 | 45 | 14 (mean) | (2006–2008) to (2009–2011) | 3.6 y | Validated SFFQ | Every 3 y | Quartile | 7 to 72.8 g/d | n/a | Independent blind assessment | Agency |
CVD indicates cardiovascular disease; FFQ, food frequency questionnaire; HDL, high‐density lipoprotein; MetS, metabolic syndrome; n/a, not applicable; SFFQ, semiquantitative food frequency questionnaire; SSBs, sugar‐sweetened beverages.
There was some variability in how the cohorts chose to represent their exposure levels, such as quantiles used and the frequency of intake vs servings/d intake. We compared the highest to lowest exposure quantile for each cohort study, regardless of the number of qunatiles (tertile, quartile, or quintile). For dose‐response analysis, SSBs and fruit exposure levels were converted to servings. For SSBs, we performed the conversion based on serving sizes indicated in the articles. For fruit, we assumed that 1 serving=1/2 cup=87.5 g=1 instance of intake (frequency).
Defined as <800 kcal/d in men and <500 kcal/d in women, or >4000 kcal/d in men and >3500 kcal/d in women.
Study only reported cases of metabolic syndrome, defined as having ≥3 of the following: abdominal obesity, high fasting glucose, low HDL cholesterol, hypertension, or high triglycerides.
Defined as <700 kcal/d in men and <500 kcal/d in women, or >4500 kcal/d in men and >3500 kcal/d in women.
Defined as ≤600 kcal/d or ≥5000 kcal/d.
Serving sizes: raisins (1 oz)/grapes (half cup); apples/pears (1), bananas (1), strawberries (half cup), blueberries (half cup), prunes (half cup), avocado (half), cantaloupe (1/4 melon), oranges (1), peaches/apricots/plums (1 or half cup canned).
Defined as <500 kcal/d or >6000 kcal/d.
Defined as <800 kcal/d in men and <500 kcal/d in women, or >4200 kcal/d in men and >3800 kcal/d in women.
Defined as <800 kcal/d in men and <600 kcal/d in women, or >8000 kcal/d in men and >6000 kcal/d in women.
Defined as <800 kcal/d for men and <500 kcal/d in women, or >4200 kcal/d in men and >3500 kcal/d in women.
Defined as ≥6 servings/d of total dairy, >4 servings/d of cheese, or ≥6 servings/d of milk.
Exams were (1991–1995), (1995–1998), (1998–2001), and (2005–2008).
Figure 2Relation of sources of fructose‐containing sugars and incident hypertension. Pair‐wise summary estimates were derived from pooled risk ratios for highest vs lowest intake of the food sources. Estimates of linear and nonlinear dose‐response relationships are presented per intake level indicated in the column, “dose comparison.” Dose‐ranges are rounded to the nearest five. Data are expressed as risk ratios (RRs) with 95% CIs. Values of I2≥50% indicate substantial heterogeneity. RRs >1.0 indicate a harmful association. The Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation of prospective cohort studies are rated as “low” certainty of evidence and can be downgraded by 5 domains and upgraded by 3 domains. Filled black squares indicate downgrade or upgrades for each outcome. NA indicates not applicable.
Figure 3Dose‐response relation between sources of fructose‐containing sugars and incident hypertension. Dose‐response relationship between intake of SSBs, fruit, 100% fruit juice, yogurt, fruit drink, dairy desserts, and sweet snacks with risk of hypertension. Red line represents the linear, and black lines represent the nonlinear models, respectively. Dotted lines represent 95% CIs of the nonlinear model. RR indicates risk ratio; SSBs, sugar‐sweetened beverages.