| Literature DB >> 33608654 |
Andreea Zurbau1,2,3, Jarvis C Noronha1, Tauseef A Khan2,3, John L Sievenpiper2,3,4,5,6, Thomas M S Wolever7.
Abstract
To determine the effect of oat β‑glucan (OBG) on acute glucose and insulin responses and identify significant effect modifiers we searched the MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Cochrane databases through October 27, 2020 for acute, crossover, controlled feeding trials investigating the effect of adding OBG (concentrate or oat-bran) to carbohydrate-containing test-meals compared to comparable or different carbohydrate-matched control-meals in humans regardless of health status. The primary outcome was glucose incremental area-under-the-curve (iAUC). Secondary outcomes were insulin iAUC, and glucose and insulin incremental peak-rise (iPeak). Two reviewers extracted the data and assessed risk-of-bias and certainty-of-evidence (GRADE). Data were pooled using generic inverse-variance with random-effects model and expressed as ratio-of-means with [95% CIs]. We included 103 trial comparisons (N = 538). OBG reduced glucose iAUC and iPeak by 23% (0.77 [0.74, 0.81]) and 28% (0.72 [0.64, 0.76]) and insulin by 22% (0.78 [0.72, 0.85]) and 24% (0.76 [0.65, 0.88]), respectively. Dose, molecular-weight, and comparator were significant effect modifiers of glucose iAUC and iPeak. Significant linear dose-response relationships were observed for all outcomes. OBG molecular-weight >300 kg/mol significantly reduced glucose iAUC and iPeak, whereas molecular-weight <300 kg/mol did not. Reductions in glucose iAUC (27 vs 20%, p = 0.03) and iPeak (39 vs 25%, p < 0.01) were significantly larger with different vs comparable control-meals. Outcomes were similar in participants with and without diabetes. All outcomes had high certainty-of-evidence. In conclusion, current evidence indicates that adding OBG to carbohydrate-containing meals reduces glycaemic and insulinaemic responses. However, the magnitude of glucose reduction depends on OBG dose, molecular-weight, and the comparator.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33608654 PMCID: PMC8563417 DOI: 10.1038/s41430-021-00875-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Nutr ISSN: 0954-3007 Impact factor: 4.016
Summary of trial characteristics.
| Characteristica | |
|---|---|
| Trial comparisons | 103 |
| Participants | 538 |
| Follow-up duration, minutes | 120 (60–240) |
| Participant characteristics | |
| • Age, years | 37 (22–66) |
| • Male:femaleb (%) | 50:50 |
| • BMI, kg/m2 | 24.9 (20.6–31.1) |
| Health Status, # of trial comparisons | |
| • Healthy | 77 |
| • Type 2 Diabetes | 11 |
| • Overweight | 9 |
| • Mixed (Health & Overweight) | 5 |
| • Metabolic Syndrome | 1 |
| Intervention characteristics | |
| • OBG dose, g | 4.2 (0.2–11.7) |
| • OBG dose, g/30 g available carbohydrates | 2.8 (0.1–22.6) |
| • Food source, # of trials | |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched/oat bran muffins | 23 |
| ⚬ OBG/oat bran added to glucose/dextrose | 20 |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched/oat bran cereal | 13 |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched/oat bran added to oatmeal porridge | 13 |
| ⚬ Oat granola/muesli with oat bran flakes | 10 |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched bread | 8 |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched/oat bran snack bar or product | 7 |
| ⚬ OBG-enriched/oat bran beverage (juice, shake, drink) | 7 |
| ⚬ Oat bran pasta | 2 |
| • Available carbohydrate, g | 50 (13–75) |
| Comparator characteristics | |
| • Type | |
| ⚬ Matched | 66 |
| ⚬ Unmatched | 37 |
| • Food source, # of trial comparisons | |
| ⚬ Glucose/dextrose/maltodextrin solution | 32 |
| ⚬ White bread | 21 |
| ⚬ Muffin | 16 |
| ⚬ Wheat porridge or oatmeal without added OBG | 12 |
| ⚬ Wheat granola/muesli with cornflakes | 7 |
| ⚬ Snack bar/product | 5 |
| ⚬ Cornflakes cereal | 4 |
| ⚬ Juice/shake/drink | 4 |
| ⚬ Durum wheat pasta | 2 |
| • Available carbohydrate, g | 50 (13–75) |
| Setting, # of trial comparisons | |
| • North America | 70 |
| • Europe | 25 |
| • South America | 4 |
| • Australia | 3 |
| • Asia | 1 |
| Funding source, # of trial comparisonsc | |
| • Agency | 43 |
| • Industry | 28 |
| • Agency & Industry | 9 |
| • Not reported | 23 |
OBG oat β-glucan, BMI body mass index.
aMedian (range) of mean data, unless otherwise indicated.
b30/31 studies provided data on sex.
cAgency funding is that from government, university, or not-for-profit sources. Industry funding is that from trade organizations that obtain revenue from the sale of products.
Fig. 1Effect of oat β-glucan on postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses.
Pooled effect estimates of the effect of oat β-glucan on the incremental area under the curve (iAUC) for blood glucose (A), incremental peak rise (iPeak) for blood glucose (B), iAUC insulin (C), and iPeak insulin (D). Pooled effect estimates are expressed as ratios of means (RoMs, black diamond) with 95% CIs (solid lines). Pooled analyses were conducted using the generic inverse variance method with random effects models. Interstudy heterogeneity was tested by the Cochran Q statistic (χ2) at a significance level of PQ < 0.10 (not shown) and quantified by I2. The residual I2 value represents unexplained heterogeneity for each subgroup. n, number of trial comparisons. *Differences between subgroups were tested using meta-regression and the significance level was reported as a p value, where p < 0.05 was considered significant.
Fig. 2Effect of oat β-glucan dose on postprandial glycaemic and insulinaemic responses.
Pooled dose-response relationship between oat β-glucan and incremental area under the curve (iAUC) for blood glucose (A), incremental peak rise (iPeak) for blood glucose (B), iAUC insulin (C), and iPeak insulin (D). Changes in the outcomes (y-axis) are presented as ratios of means (RoMs). Oat β-glucan dose is presented on a 1 g/30 g available carbohydrate scale. Individual comparisons are represented by the circles, with the weight of the study in the overall analysis represented by the size of the circles. The central straight line represents the fitted dose response estimate with outer dashed lines representing the 95% confidence intervals (CIs), which was modelled using one-stage random effects with the generic inverse variance and restricted maximum likelihood methods, assuming a linear function.
Fig. 3Effect of oat β-glucan molecular weight and dose on postprandial glycaemic responses.
Pooled dose-response relationship by low, medium and high molecular weight oat β-glucan on the incremental area under the curve (iAUC) for blood glucose (A–C) and incremental peak rise (iPeak) for blood glucose (D–F). Changes in the outcomes (y-axis) are presented as ratios of means (RoMs). Oat β-glucan dose is presented on a 1 g/30 g available carbohydrate scale. Individual comparisons are represented by the circles, with the weight of the study in the overall analysis represented by the size of the circles. The light grey and blue circles represent the trial comparisons with matched and unmatched comparators, respectively. The central straight line represents the fitted dose response estimate with outer dashed lines representing the 95% confidence intervals (CIs), which was modelled using one-stage random effects with the generic inverse variance and restricted maximum likelihood methods, assuming a linear function. The vertical dashed line represents the dose level at which the upper-bound 95% CIs cross the physiologically relevant threshold of a 20% reduction.