| Literature DB >> 34550452 |
Mai Umeda1, Takeichiro Tominaga2, Kazuya Kozuma3, Hidefumi Kitazawa4, Daisuke Furushima2, Masanobu Hibi4, Hiroshi Yamada2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Gargling with tea has protective effects against influenza infection and upper respiratory tract infection (URTI). To evaluate if tea and tea catechin consumption has the same protective effects as gargling with tea, we performed a systematic review and meta-analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Epigallocatechin gallate; Gargle; Green tea; Non-pharmaceutical intervention; Respiratory virus infection; Tea beverage
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34550452 PMCID: PMC8456193 DOI: 10.1007/s00394-021-02681-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Nutr ISSN: 1436-6207 Impact factor: 5.614
Fig. 1Flow diagram for study selection
Study characteristics
| Author (year of publication) | Study design | Primary outcome | Country | Setting | Mode of intervention | Population ( | Duration (months) | Intervention (tea or tea catechins: gargling/consumption) | Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Iwata (1997) | Prospective cohort | Flu | Japan | Workplace | Gargle | 297 | 5 | Black tea extract (0.5 w/v%) including EGCg, the aflavin digallate gargling 2 times/day | No intervention |
| Yamada (2006) | Prospective cohort | Flu | Japan | Healthcare facility | Gargle | 124 | 3 | 200 μg/ml catechins, 60% of catechins comprise EGCg gargling 3 times/day | Control solution gargling 3 times/day |
| Yamada (2007) | RCT | Flu | Japan | General community | Gargle | 404 | 3 | 400 μg/ml catechins, 59.3% of catechins comprise EGCg, 15.1% ECg gargling 3 times/day | Tap water gargling 3 times/day |
| Rowe (2007) | RCT | URTI | USA | General community | Capsule | 124 | 3 | Placebo capsule 2 capsules/ day | |
| Matsumoto (2011) | RCT | URTI | Japan | Healthcare facility | Capsule | 197 | 5 | 63 mg catechins including 45 mg EGCg and 35 mg theanine6 capsules/day | Placebo capsule 6 capsules/day |
| Yoshioka (2013) | Prospective cohort | Flu | Japan | Junior high school | Drink | 236 | 1–3 | Goishi tea (0.4 w/v%)daily consumption | No intervention |
| Toyoizumi (2013) | RCT | Flu | Japan | High school | Gargle | 308 | 3 | 56 mg/dL catechins, including 18% EGCg gargling 3 times/day | Water gargling 3 times/day |
| Ide (2014) | RCT | Flu | Japan | High school | Gargle | 757 | 3 | 37 ± 0.2 mg/dL catechins, including 18% EGCg gargling 3 times/day | Tap water gargling 3 times/day |
| Delabre (2015) | Prospective cohort | Flu | France | General community | Drink | 1121 | 2 | Green tea or black tea Minimum of 2 times a week | No intervention |
| Furushima (2020) | RCT | URTI | Japan | Healthcare facility | Drink | 270 | 3 | 57 mg catechins, including 20 mg EGCg, high-catechins: 3 times/day low-catechins: once/day | Placebo drink once/day |
ECg epicatechin gallate; EGCg epigallocatechin gallate; Flu influenza; RCT randomized controlled trial; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
Analysis of risk-of-bias using the Newcastle–Ottawa scale
| Study | Design | Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 1 | 2 | 3 | ||||
| Iwata (1997) | Prospective cohort | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | 5 | |||
| Yamada (2006) | Prospective cohort | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | 8 |
| Yoshioka (2013) | Prospective cohort | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | 7 | |
| Delabre (2015) | Prospective cohort | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | ◆ | 8 |
Fig. 2Risk-of-bias assessment of the RCTs. a Traffic light plots of domain-level judgements for each individual result. b Weighted bar plots of the distribution of risk-of-bias judgements within each bias domain
Fig. 3Forest plot of tea or tea catechins versus control on influenza infection and acute upper respiratory tract infection. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
Fig. 4Funnel plot of tea or tea catechins versus control on influenza infection and acute upper respiratory tract infection
Fig. 5Forest plots of meta-analysis results of sub-analysis by study type: tea and tea catechins versus control on RCTs and prospective cohort studies. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; RCTs randomized controlled trials; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
Fig. 6Forest plots of meta-analysis results of sub-analysis by disease type: tea and tea catechins versus control on acute upper respiratory tract infection and influenza infection. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
Fig. 7Forest plots of meta-analysis results of sub-analysis by method of intervention: tea catechin consumption and tea gargling versus control on influenza infection and acute upper respiratory tract infection. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; URTI upper respiratory tract infection
Fig. 8Dose dependency of catechin effects using meta-regression. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; URTI upper respiratory tract infection; HC high-catechin group; LC low catechin group
Fig. 9Forest plots of sensitivity analysis by the number of events. a Sub-analysis with a cutoff number of 20 events. b Sub-analysis with a cutoff number of ten events. CI confidence interval; Flu influenza infection; URTI upper respiratory tract infection