| Literature DB >> 32992896 |
Christiana C Christodoulou1,2,3, Christiana A Demetriou4, Eleni Zamba-Papanicolaou1,3.
Abstract
Decades of research and experimental studies have investigated Huntington's disease (HD), a rare neurodegenerative disease. Similarly, several studies have investigated whether high/moderate adherence to the Mediterranean Diet and specific macro and micronutrients can decrease cognitive loss and provide a neuroprotective function to neurons. This review systematically identifies and examines studies that have investigated Mediterranean Diet adherence, micro- and macronutrients, supplementation and caloric intake in people with HD, in order to identify if dietary exposures resulted in improvement of disease symptoms, a delay in age of onset or if they contributed to an earlier age of onset in people with HD. A systematic search of PubMed, Directory of open access journal and HubMed was performed independently by two reviewers using specific search terms criteria for studies. The identified abstracts were screened and the studies were included in the review if they satisfied predetermined inclusion criteria. Reference screening of included studies was also performed. A total of 18 studies were included in the review. A few studies found that patients who had high/moderate adherence to Mediterranean Diet showed a slight improvement in their Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale and Total Functional Capacity. In addition, people with HD who had high Mediterranean Diet adherence showed an improvement in both cognitive and motor scores and had a better quality of life compared to patients who had low Mediterranean Diet adherence. Furthermore, a few studies showed that supplementation with specific nutrients, such as triheaptanoin, L-acetyl-carnitine and creatine, had no beneficial effect on the patients' Unified Huntington's Disease Rating Scale score. A few studies suggest that the Mediterranean Diet may confer a motor and cognitive benefit to people with HD. Unfortunately, there was little consistency among study findings. It is important for more research to be conducted to have a better understanding of which dietary exposures are beneficial and may result delaying age of onset or disease progression in people with HD.Entities:
Keywords: Huntington’s disease; Mediterranean Diet adherence; caloric intake; macronutrients; micronutrients
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32992896 PMCID: PMC7601299 DOI: 10.3390/nu12102946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram. The following flow diagram indicates the identification, screening, eligibility and studies included in this review and also studies and the reasons for their exclusion from the study.
Overview of studies included in the review.
| Study Reference | Study Countries | Range of Participants | Range of Ages | Study Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| People with HD recruited from | 25–57 years | Prospective cohort study |
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| 98 Spanish people with HD and pre-manifesting HD carriers of the European Huntington Disease Networks | 48 (range 38–60) | Cohort study |
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| 135 Symptomatic people with HD | 50 ± 9.3 (Ethyl EPA group) | Double blind, randomized controlled trial (RCT) |
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| 34 Symptomatic people with HD | 51.3 ± 2.5 | Double blind, randomized controlled trial (RCT) |
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| 6 people with HD with abnormal CAG repeat expansions | NR | Short term cohort clinical trial study |
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| 10 HD patients in a double blind RCT, crossover design | 51.6 (16.7) | Double blind placebo controlled cross-over study |
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| 23 institutionalized people with HD | 43.4 (10.3) | Retrospective study |
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| 10 people with HD and 3 HD mutation carriers | NR | Open-label pilot study |
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| 347 early HD patients | 18–75 (47.9 years) | Double blind, randomized controlled trial (RCT) |
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| 30 people with HD | 46 (range 20–69) | Interventional study cohort study |
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| 224 Spanish people with HD patients and carriers from the European HD registry (EHDN) | 47.41 ± 14.26 | Observational, cross-sectional study |
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| 25 people with HD | 46 ± 12 | Case-control study |
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| 30 people with HD 19 men and 11 women | 44.7 ± 11.4 | Intervention and cohort study |
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| 18 choreic patients | 15 to 57 years | Case-Control study |
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| 51 people with HD | 53 (range 26–78) | Cohort study |
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| 80 people with HD | Not reported (NR) | Cohort study |
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| People with HD recruited from Prospective Huntington at Risk Observational study (PHAROS) | Non-expanded CAG < 37 | Case-Control study |
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| 32 HD patients CAG expansion > 36 | 42 ± 11 (range 28 to 80 years) | Case-Control study |
HD: Huntington’s disease, NIH: National Institutes of Health, FFQ: food frequency questionnaire, CAG: cytosine-adenine-guanine, EPA: eicosapentaenoic acid, NR: Not reported.
Characteristics of studies investigating the association of Mediterranean Diet, caloric intake and dietary pattern on Huntington’s disease.
| First Author, | Subjects and Ethnicity, N | Mean Age at Blood Collection ± SD Age Range | Sample Type | Exposure (Dietary Consumption, Dietary Patterns) | Clinical Outcome, Analysis and Effect Estimation | Cofounders | Clinical Conclusions | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HD carriers recruited from Prospective Huntington at Risk Observational study (PHAROS) | 25–57 years | Blood sample for DNA analysis | MeDi score based on FFQ food group intake and Caloric Intake | Multiple regression models comparing indicated variables between MeDi tertiles: | 0.100 | Age | Adherence to MeDi affects phenoconversion and effects of BMI and caloric intake in time of phenoconversion |
|
| 98 Spanish HD patients and pre-manifesting HD carriers of the European Huntington Disease Networks | 48 (range 38–60) | NR | Adherence to Mediterranean Diet and nutrition assessed via 3 days dietary record | Multiple logistic regression model: |
| Gender | Moderate MeDi adherence is associated with better quality life, lower motor impairment and low risk of abdominal obesity compared to HD patients with low MeDi adherence |
|
| RCT | 50 ± 9.3 | Peripheral blood | 2 g/day ethyl EPA or 2 × 500 mg of capsules of liquid paraffin for a year | ANCOVA test: | 0.061 | Age | Ethyl-EPA in the improvement or non-improvement of the TMS-4 score |
|
| RCT | 51.3 ± 2.5 | MRI brain scans | 2 g/day of Ethyl-EPA or 2 × 500 mg of light liquid paraffin twice daily for a year | Two samples | 0.067 (NS) | Age | Treatment of Ethyl-EPA showed reduced rate of atrophy over the first 6 months |
|
| 6 HD patients with abnormal CAG repeat expansions | NR | Blood and urine samples | Ingestion of triheptanoin 1 g/kg per day divided in four meals | Paired t tests: Compare values of plasma acylcarnitines, serum IGF1 and UHDRs before and after triheptanoin |
| Sex | Triheptanoin treatment produced a non-significant increase in mean UHDRS |
|
| 10 HD patients in a double blind RCT, crossover design | 51.6 (16.7) | NR | Administration of L-Acetyl carnitine (LACC) dose of 45 mg/kg/day for 1 week | Friedman’s two-way analysis of variance: | NR | Safety and toxicity of LACC | |
|
| 23 institutionalized HD patients | 43.4 (10.3) | Blood sample | Comparison of mean follow up values for motor, cognitive and behavioural parameters | Comparison of patients | 0.831 | NR | HD patients with hypocarnitinemia may benefit from a low dose of levocarnitine supplementation |
|
| 10 HD patients and 3 HD mutation carriers | NR | Blood sample | 10 g per day of creatine for 12 months | Mann-Whitney U two tailed test: | NS | NR | Tolerability, safety and efficacy of creatine supplementation |
|
| RCT double-blind parallel group, clinical trail | 18–75 (47.9 years) | Blood sample | Given either coenzyme Q10 (600 mg/day), | Adjusted mean change in assessments over 30 months by baseline UA quintile: | Gender | Association between higher UA levels and slowing of HD progression by measuring TFC | |
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| 30 HD patients | 46 (range 20-69) | Blood sample | Nutritional supplement 2 cans of 236 mL in addition to diet for 90 days | Wilcoxon’s signed ranks test or paired t-test: Before and after nutritional intervention | 0.720 | NR | Nutritional innervation slightly improved the anthropometric variables in HD patients |
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| 224 Spanish HD patients and carriers from the European HD registry (EHDN) | 47.41 ± 14.26 | NR | Dietary intake and nutritional intake via 3-day record and 24 h FFQ | BMI in pre-manifest vs. manifest HD patients | 0.330 | NR | Analyse association of nutritional factors with HD severity |
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| 25 HD patients | 46 ± 12 | Blood sample | Carbohydrate, protein and fat intake via a 3- day FFQ and anthropometric and biochemical indicators | Independent samples | NR | Nutritional status, anthropometric, biochemical indictors, energy and macronutrient intake to determine indicators altered in HD patients and nutritional requirements to improve their quality of life | |
|
| 30 HD patients 19 men and 11 women | 44.7 ± 11.4 | Arterial blood sample | Citrulline blood levels, as a marker of urea cycle deficiency in a high protein diet | Pearson’s correlation: Between citrulline concentration in HD patients over 2 years follow up with: | 0.0985 | NR | Blood citrulline concentration – a marker of urea cycle deficiency following a HPD was not associated with HD progression |
|
| 18 choreic patients | 15 to 57 years | Fasting blood samples | Nutritional status (daily meal frequency, meal schedule, food quantity and snack intake, energy consumption vegetables, animal proteins, total fat cholesterol and carbohydrates, iron, vitamins A, C, niacin levels and essential amino acids) | ANOVA: comparing amino acid intake in control, choreic patients, 1st generation, 2nd generation and 3rd generation | NS | Age | |
|
| 51 HD patients | 53 (range 26-78) | NR | Eating, drinking and smoking habits over a period of 10 years before the age of onset | Spearman’s rank correlation test between overall age at onset (AOAS) and consumption of: | 0.520 | ||
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| 80 HD patients | NR | NR | Mean daily caffeine intake (coffee, tea, chocolate and soda) assessed retrospectively before and after disease onset using dietary survey | Student t test: Comparison of two groups | 0.1144 | Gender | Higher caffeine consumption before onset was associated with a younger age of onset |
|
| HD carriers (pre-symptomatic) and controls recruited from Prospective Huntington at Risk Observational study (PHAROS) | 44.9 (7.9) | Blood sample | Caloric intake, body mass index (BMI), dietary consumption of macronutrients (carbohydrates, protein, fat intake) assessed via a FFQ | t tests and x2 tests: | Age | ||
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| 32 HD patients CAG expansion > 36 | 42 ± 11 (range 28 to 80 years) | Blood and urine samples | Semi-quantitative questionnaire of regular food and beverage consumption to observe caloric intake in HD patients | ANOVA Comparison of means | Age | Weight loss starts early in disease |
NS: Non-significant, TFC: Total Functional Capacity, UA: Uric acid, CAG: Cytosine-Adenosine-Guanine, AOIM: Age of onset of involuntary movement, AOPC: Age of onset of psychological changes, RCT: Randomized Controlled Trial, MMSE: Mini-Mental State Examination, UHDRS: Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale, EHDN: European Huntington’s Disease Network, RP: Rate of progression, NR: Not reported, N/A: Not available, BCAA: branched-chain amino acid. Significant p-values are indicated in bold *.