| Literature DB >> 34531367 |
Yujie Xu1, Linan Zeng2, Kun Zou3, Shufang Shan4, Xiaoyu Wang4, Jingyuan Xiong5, Li Zhao3, Lingli Zhang6, Guo Cheng7.
Abstract
The role of diet in depression is becoming increasingly acknowledged. This umbrella review aimed to summarize comprehensively the current evidence reporting the effects of dietary factors on the prevention and treatment of depression. PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library were searched up to June 2021 to identify relevant meta-analyses of prospective studies. Twenty-eight meta-analyses, with 40 summary estimates on dietary patterns (n = 8), food and beverages (n = 19), and nutrients (n = 13) were eligible. The methodological quality of most meta-analyses was low (50.0%) or very low (25.0%). Quality of evidence was moderate for inverse associations for depression incidence with healthy diet [risk ratio (RR): 0.74, 95% confidential interval (CI), 0.48-0.99, I2 = 89.8%], fish (RR: 0.88, 95% CI, 0.79-0.97, I2 = 0.0%), coffee (RR: 0.89, 95% CI, 0.84-0.94, I2 = 32.9%), dietary zinc (RR: 0.66, 95% CI 0.50-0.82, I2 = 13.9%), light to moderate alcohol (<40 g/day, RR: 0.77, 95% CI, 0.74-0.83, I2 = 20.5%), as well as for positive association with sugar-sweetened beverages (RR: 1.05, 95% CI, 1.01-1.09, I2 = 0.0%). For depression treatment, moderate-quality evidence was identified for the effects of probiotic [standardized mean difference (SMD): -0.31, 95% CI, -0.56 to -0.07, I2 = 48.2%], omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (SMD: -0.28, 95% CI, -0.47 to -0.09, I2 = 75.0%) and acetyl-L-carnitine (SMD: -1.10, 95% CI, -1.65 to -0.56, I2 = 86.0%) supplementations. Overall, the associations between dietary factors and depression had been extensively evaluated, but none of them were rated as high quality of evidence, suggesting further studies are likely to change the summary estimates. Thus, more well-designed research investigating more detailed dietary factors in association with depression is warranted.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34531367 PMCID: PMC8445939 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01590-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1Flow chart illustrating the literature search process in the umbrella review.
Descriptive characteristics of the included meta-analyses in this umbrella review.
| Author (year) | Dietary intervention/exposures | Comparison | Database searched | No. of studies | Type of included studies | Settings | Participants | Ages | %Male | Total | Follow-up (years) | Country of author | AMSTAR-2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Preventive effect of dietary factor-dietary pattern | |||||||||||||
| Askari, 2020 [ | Vegetarian diet | Highest vs lowest adherence | 3 | 3 | Cohort | 2 EU;1 Asia | General adults | NR | 0–100 | 19,783 | 4–7 | Iran | Low |
| Lassale, 2019 [ | AHEI or AHEI-2010 scores | Highest vs lowest adherence | 3 | 3 | Cohort | EU | General adults | 37–61 | NR | 45,533 (3477 cases) | 5–8.5 | United Kingdom | Moderate |
| Tolkien, 2019 [ | DII scores | Highest vs lowest adherence | 2 | 5 | Cohort | 4 EU; 2 USA; 1 Australia | General adults | 26–81 | 0–75 | 77,420 | 5–12.6 | United Kingdom | Very low |
| Shafiei, 2019 [ | Mediterranean diet | Highest vs lowest adherence | 5 | 4 | Cohort | 2 EU;1 Australia;1 USA | General adults | 49.5–69 | NR | 31,742 | 8–12.6 | Iran | Low |
| Molendijk, 2018 [ | Healthy dietary pattern | Highest vs lowest adherence | 3 | 9 | Cohort | 3 EU; 2 Australia;1 USA; 2 Canada;1 Asia | General adults | 18–74 | 0–75 | 105,494 | 6.5 months– 12.7 | Netherlands | Moderate |
| Li, 2017 [ | Western dietary pattern | Highest vs lowest adherence | 2 | 8 | Cohort | 2 Asia; 3 EU;1 Australia; 1 Canada; 1 USA | General adults | 20–77 | NR | 75,481 | NR | China | Low |
| Preventive effect of dietary factor-food and beverages | |||||||||||||
| Pagliai, 2021 [ | Ultra-processed foods | Highest vs lowest intake | 5 | 2 | Cohort | 2 EU | General adults | 18–86 | NR | 41,637 (2995 cases) | NR | Italy | High |
| Nucci, 2020 [ | Red and processed meat | Highest vs lowest intake | 3 | 5 | Cohort | 1 Asia;3 EU;1 Australia | General adults | 39–81 | NR | 21,486 (2352 cases) | 3–9 | Italy | Low |
| Li, 2020 [ | Alcohol rink | Heavy drinking (å 48 g/d) vs non-drinker | 3 | 24 | Cohort | 12 EU; 6 USA; 5 Australia; 1 Canada | General adults | 18–99 | 0–100 | 295,477 (21,378 cases) | 1–40 | China | Low |
| Li, 2020 [ | Alcohol rink | Light-moderate drinking (<40 g/d) vs non-drinker | 3 | 11 | Cohort | NR | General adults | 18–99 | 0–100 | 3423 cases | 1–40 | China | Low |
| Hu, 2019 [ | Sugar-sweetened beverages | Highest vs lowest intake | 2 | 4 | Cohort | 2 EU; 2 Australia | General adults | 35–71 | NR | 277,405 (12630 cases) | NR | China | Low |
| Hu, 2019 [ | Sugar-sweetened beverages | per 2 cups/d of cola | 2 | 4 | Cohort | 2 EU; 2 Australia | General adults | 35–71 | NR | 277,405 (12630 cases) | NR | China | Low |
| Yang, 2018 [ | Fish | Highest vs lowest intake | 2 | 8 | Cohort | 3 USA; 2 Australia; 2 Asia; 1 EU | General adults | 25–82 | 0–100 | 101,443 (5732 cases | 5–25 | South Korea | Low |
| Yang, 2018 [ | Fish | 1 Serving/ week increment | 2 | 3 | Cohort | 1 EU; 1 Australia; 1 Asia | General adults | 45–82 | 0–100 | 35,431 (1136 cases | 5–25 | South Korea | Low |
| Saghafian 2018 [ | Fruit | Highest vs lowest intake | 5 | 6 | Cohort | 1 Asia; 2 EU; 2 Australia; 1 USA | General adults | 21–85 | NR | 99,224 (3726 cases) | NR | Iran | Low |
| Saghafian, 2018 [ | Fruit | Per 100 g increment | 5 | 3 | Cohort | 1 Asia;1 Columbia;1 Australia | General adults | 50–79 | NR | 78,855 (2593 cases | NR | Iran | Low |
| Saghafian, 2018 [ | Vegetable | Highest vs lowest intake | 5 | 7 | Cohort | 2 Asia;1 Columbia;2 Australia;2 UK | General adults | 21–85 | NR | 100,295 (2928 cases) | NR | Iran | Low |
| Kang, 2018 [ | Tea | Highest vs lowest intake | 2 | 5 | Cohort | 3 Asia; 1 EU; 1 USA | General adults | 42–93 | 0–100 | 259,818 (11,937 cases) | NR | South Korea | Very low |
| Grosso, 2016 [ | Coffee | Highest vs lowest intake | 2 | 3 | Cohort | 2 USA; 1 EU | General adults | NR | NR | 316,894 (4656 cases | NR | Italy | Low |
| Grosso, 2016 [ | Coffee | 500 ml/d | 2 | 3 | Cohort | 2 USA; 1 EU | General adults | NR | NR | 316,894 (4656 cases | NR | Italy | Low |
| Wang, 2016 [ | Caffeine | Highest vs lowest intake | 4 | 4 | Cohort | 3 EU; 1 USA | General adults | >18 | NR | 29,033 | NR | China | Very low |
| Wang, 2016 [ | Caffeine | 509 mg/day | 4 | 2 | Cohort | 3 EU; 1 USA | General adults | >18 | NR | 5992 (669 cases) | NR | China | Very low |
| Preventive effect of dietary factor-nutrients | |||||||||||||
| Yosaee, 2020 [ | Dietary zinc | Highest vs lowest intake | 4 | 4 | Cohort | 3 Australia; 1 EU | General adults | å 54.7 | NR | 15,852 (2243 cases) | 3–20 | Iran | High |
| Deane, 2019 [ | n-3 PUFA | Higher intake vs lower intake | 5 | 13 | RCTs | 7 UK; 5 USA; 1 Asia | General adults | 50–85 | NR | 26,528 (1355 cases) | NR | United Kingdom | High |
| Li, 2017 [ | Dietary magnesium | Highest vs lowest intake | 8 | 2 | Cohort | EU | General adults | 37–62 | NR | 15,259 | 6.3–20 | China | Very low |
| Li, 2017 [ | Dietary magnesium | 361 mg/day | 8 | 2 | Cohort | EU | General adults | 37–62 | NR | 15,259 | 6.3–20 | China | Very low |
| Grosso, 2016 [ | n-3 PUFA | Highest vs lowest intake | 4 | 4 | Cohort | 3 EU;1 USA | General adults | 24–69 | NR | 41,588 | 2–13 | Italy | Low |
| Grosso, 2016 [ | n-3 PUFA | 1.8 g/d | 4 | 2 | Cohort | 2 Australia | General adults | 25–64 | NR | 13,757 | 3–10 | Italy | Low |
| Therapeutic effect of dietary factors | |||||||||||||
| Tome, 2021 [ | Vitamin D supplementation | Vitamin D vs placebo | 4 | 10 | RCTs | 6 Asia, 3 EU, 1 USA | Depressed patients | NR | NR | 1398 (I:696; C:702) | NA | Spain | Low |
| Fusar-Poli, 2021 [ | Cocoa-rich foods | Cocoa-rich products vs placebo | 2 | 5 | RCTs | 2 Asia; 1 EU; 1 USA; 1 Australia | General adults | 50–80 | 0–100 | 293 (I:148; C:145) | NA | Italy | High |
| Yosaee, 2020 [ | Dietary zinc supplementation | Zinc vs placebo/antidepressants | 4 | 7 | RCTs | 5 Asia; 2 EU | Depressed patients | NR | NR | 319 (I: 159C 160) | NA | Iran | High |
| Young, 2019 [ | B vitamin supplementation | B vitamin vs placebo | 4 | 7 | RCTs | 2 EU; 5 Australia | Healthy and “at risk” adults | 18–69 | 0–100 | 568 (I:278C: 290) | NA | Australia | Very low |
| Firth, 2019 [ | Dietary intervention | Dietary intervention vs non-dietary control | 8 | 16 | RCTs | 3 USA; 4 Australia; 3 Columbia; 6 EU | Depressed patients | 21–85 | NR | 45,958 I:1918 C:26,778 | NA | United Kingdom | High |
| Elin, 2019 [ | Very low-calorie diet | Very low-calorie vs control | 3 | 11 | RCTs | 1 EU; 10 USA | Depressed patients | 20–58 | 0–53 | 354 | NR | Canada | Very low |
| Liu, 2019 [ | Probiotic intervention | Probiotic vs placebo | 3 | 23 | RCTs | NR | Healthy adults | 18–79 | 0–100 | 2574 | NR | USA | Low |
| Liu, 2019 [ | Prebiotic intervention | Prebiotic vs placebo | 3 | 4 | RCTs | NR | Depressed patients | 23–54 | 49–51 | 384 | NR | USA | Low |
| Liao, 2019 [ | n-3 PUFA supplementation | n-3 PUFA vs placebo | 2 | 26 | RCTs | NR | Depressed patients | 18–95 | NR | 2160 (I:1089 C:1071) | NR | China | Low |
| Veronese, 2018 [ | ALC supplementation | ALC vs placebo | 5 | 9 | RCTs | EU | Depressed patients | 46.3–80 | 20–60 | 467 (I:231 C:236) | NR | United Kingdom | Low |
| Veronese, 2018 [ | ALC supplementation | ALC vs antidepressant | 5 | 3 | RCTs | EU | Depressed patients | 45–72.2 | 22–33 | 324 (I:162 C:162) | NR | United Kingdom | Low |
| Sarris, 2016 [ | Folic acid supplementation | Folic acid vs placebo | 4 | 4 | RCTs | EU | Depressed patients | >18 | NR | 671 | NR | Australia | Very low |
AMSTAR-2 A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic Reviews-2, AHEI alternate healthy eating index, DII dietary inflammatory index, ALC acetyl-l-carnitine; n-3 PUFA omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acid, RCTs randomized clinical trials, NR not reported, NA not appliable, I intervention group, C control group, EU Europe.
Fig. 2Summary estimates with 95% confidence intervals and quality of evidence for the associations between dietary patterns or dietary quality indices and the risk of depression.
AHEI alternate healthy eating index, DII dietary inflammatory index, CI confidence interval.
Fig. 3Summary estimates with 95% confidence intervals and quality of evidence for the associations between food and beverages and the risk of depression.
SSBs sugar-sweetened beverages, CI confidence interval.
Fig. 4Summary estimates with 95% confidence intervals and quality of evidence for the associations between nutrients and the risk of depression.
aBased on meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials, bbased on meta-analysis of cohorts. n-3 PUFA omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acid, CI confidence interval.
Summary estimates with 95% confidence intervals and quality of evidence for associations between dietary intervention and the treatment of depression.
| Interventions | No. of studies | No. of participants | Comparison | Estimates | 95% CI | Quality of evidence | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dietary pattern | |||||||
| Healthy diet | 16 | 45,958 | Diet intervention vs control | Hedges’s | (0.10, 0.45) | 89.4 | Moderate |
| Very-low calorie diet | 11 | 354 | Very low-calorie vs control | Hedges’s | (−1.20, −0.25) | 32.2 | Low |
| Food groups | |||||||
| Cocoa-rich foods | 5 | 293 | Cocoa-rich foods vs placebo | Hedges’s | (−0.68, −0.17) | 43.5 | Low |
| Prebiotic | 5 | 384 | Prebiotic vs placebo | SMD = −0.08 | (−0.30, 0.15) | 56.8 | Low |
| Probiotic | 23 | 2574 | Probiotic vs placebo | SMD = −0.31 | (−0.56, −0.07) | 48.2 | Moderate |
| Nutrients | |||||||
| Dietary zinc | 8 | 319 | Zinc vs placebo | SMD = −4.16 | (−6.56, −1.75) | 80.1 | Low |
| Vitamin D | 10 | 1398 | Vitamin D vs placebo | SMD = −0.91 | (−2.02, 0.19) | 99.0 | Moderate |
| B vitamins | 7 | 568 | B vitamin vs placebo | SMD = 0.15 | (−0.01, 0.32) | 0.0 | Very low |
| Folate acid | 4 | 671 | Folate acid vs placebo | Hedges’s | (−0.31, 1.29) | 93.0 | Very low |
| n-3 PUFA | 26 | 2160 | n-3 PUFA vs placebo | SMD = −0.28 | (−0.47, −0.09) | 75.0 | Moderate |
| ALC | 9 | 467 | ALC vs placebo | SMD = −1.10 | (−1.65, −0.56) | 86.0 | Moderate |
| ALC | 3 | 323 | ALC vs antidepressant | SMD = 0.058 | (−0.22, 0.34) | 31.0 | Low |
SMD standardized mean differences, CI confidence interval, ALC acetyl-l-carnitine, n-3 PUFA omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acid.