| Literature DB >> 34675405 |
Abstract
Within the last decades, plant-based diets have received increasing interest for their potential benefits to human and environmental health. The concept of plant-based diet, however, varies widely in its definition. Current definitions range from the exclusion of all animal products to diets that include meat, fish, and dairy in varying quantities. Therefore, the main objectives of this review were twofold: (a) to investigate how researchers use the term plant-based diet in nutrition intervention studies and (b) what types of food a plant-based diet may include. Searching two databases, we found that the term "plant-based diet" evokes varying ideas to researchers and clinicians. Fifty percent of the retrieved studies that included a plant-based dietary intervention completely proscribed animal products and used the term plant-based diet interchangeably with a vegan diet. In contrast, an ~33% of trials included dairy products and 20% of dietary interventions emphasized a semi-vegetarian dietary pattern. Based on specific examples, we point out how the usage of the umbrella term "plant-based diet" may cause significant ambiguity. We often encountered incomplete descriptions of plant-based dietary interventions, which makes comparison and reproducibility of studies difficult. As a consequence, we urge others to use the term "plant-based diet" only in conjunction with a detailed dietary description. To facilitate this process, we provide a template of a standardized plant-based intervention reporting checklist. Finally, the present review also highlights the urgent need for a consensus definition of the term plant-based diet and its content.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34675405 PMCID: PMC9187516 DOI: 10.1038/s41430-021-01023-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Clin Nutr ISSN: 0954-3007 Impact factor: 4.884
Fig. 1The spectrum of diets including none or only certain types of animal-based products.
From right to left: vegan diet (excluding all flesh foods and animal products), lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet (excluding meat, fish, or poultry but including eggs and dairy), pesco-vegetarian diet (excluding meat or poultry but including fish) and omnivorous diet (containing all food groups) [56]. Modified from Medawar et al. [4].
Fig. 2PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram.
The PRISMA flow diagram for the present review detailing the number of identified records, the number of records screened and the full texts retrieved.
What makes a plant-based diet? An overview of plant-based dietary interventions.
| Author (year) | Location | Type | Duration | PBD defined or described | Animal foods allowed? | Meat allowed? | Fish allowed? | Dairy allowed? | Increased consumption of plant foods? | Reduced consumption of animal foods? | Intervention characteristics | Diet group | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Singh et al. (2020) [ | USA | Single-arm trial | 5 months | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Culturally tailored PBD, based on a four tiered food guide. Highest tier included whole plant foods with minimal processing, allowing a pesco-vegetarian pattern. | Pesco-vegetarian | A PBD was deemed useful for weight management in overweight/obese Hispanic/Latino children. |
| Jakše et al. (2020) [ | Slovenia | Single-arm trial | – | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPBD. Restriction of refined fats. Ultra-processed foods omitted. No animal products. Supplemented diet. | Vegan diet | A WFPBD favorably affects weight control management and may reverse obesity. | |
| Crimarco et al. (2020) [ | USA | RCT | 3 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD (vegan) intervention. Participants encouraged to avoid meat, fish, poultry, eggs, and dairy products. | Vegan diet | Significant weight loss within 3 weeks; improved attitude toward PBDs. | |
| Morin et al. (2019) [ | Canada | Single-arm trial | 12 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPBD. Participants encouraged to avoid animal products (elimination) and to limit highly processed foods. | Vegan diet | A WFPBD favorably affects cardiovascular health (e.g. body weight, serum lipids). | |
| Lederer et al. (2019) [ | Germany | RCT | 4 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Authors use the terms strict vegan diet and PBD interchangeably. Vegan diet excludes all animal products. | Vegan diet | Vegan diet reduces cholesterol and vitamin B12 intake after 4 weeks. | |
| Drost et al. (2019) [ | USA | CR | 3 weeks | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | WFPBD encouraging nutrient-dense plant foods while minimizing processed and animal-based foods. | Semi-vegetarian diet | WFPBD improves pre-operative glycemic control in persons with type-2-diabetes. |
| Chiba et al. (2019) [ | Japan | Single-arm trial | – | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD described as a “lacto-ovo-semi-vegetarian diet”, including fish once a week and meat once every 2 weeks. Eggs, milk, and plain yoghurt were used. | Semi-vegetarian diet | PBD (combined with induction therapy) favorably affects relapse rates in patients with ulcerative colitis. |
| Campbell and Liebman (2019) [ | USA | CR | – | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Intervention based on a food guide detailing appropriate groups of food for a WFPBD. Foods to avoid included meat, dairy, and eggs. | Vegan diet | Improved weight and hyperphosphataemia in a patient with chronic kidney disease. | |
| Campbell et al. (2019) [ | USA | Single-arm trial | – | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPB nutritional approach strictly excluding animal-based foods and minimizing processed foods. | Vegan diet | WFPBD promotes weight loss and reduces blood pressure/cholesterol. | |
| Allen et al. (2019) [ | USA | CR | – | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD emphasizing whole grains, vegetables, legumes; excluding all animal products and limiting packaged and processed foods | Vegan diet | WFPBD promotes weight loss and improved symptoms of heart failure and glycemic control. | |
| Valdez et al. (2018) [ | USA | Single-arm trial | 10 days | Yes | – | – | – | – | Yes | Yes | WFPBD with minimal processed foods and saturated fat. Vegan options provided at a local restaurant. It remains unclear if animal products were allowed. | Not attributable | WFPBD improved lipid profiles in college students and altered their dietary decisions toward more plant foods. |
| Towery et al. (2018) [ | USA | Single-arm trial | 8 weeks | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | The PBD consisted of grains, fruits, vegetables, legumes, dairy products, and eggs. Processed foods and beverages discouraged. | Lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet | PBD decreased pain and improved quality of life in individuals with chronic musculoskeletal pain. |
| Ramal et al. (2018) [ | USA | RCT | 6 months | Yes | Yes | – | – | – | Yes | Yes | Authors describe their PBD as a high-fiber, low-fat diet, derived from mostly plant-based sources. It remains unclear which animal products were allowed. | Not attributable | PBD significantly improved glycemic control in Latinos living in medically underserved areas. |
| Najjar et al. (2018) [ | USA | Single-arm trial | 4 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD excluding all animal products and emphasizing raw fruits, vegetables, avocado and raw seeds. | Vegan diet | PBD mitigated cardiovascular risk factors and reduced medication needs. | |
| Kahleova et al. (2018) [ | USA | RCT | 16 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Term “low-fat, PBD” used interchangeably with a (low-fat) vegan diet consisting of vegetables, grains, legumes, and fruits. Animal products and added oils excluded. | Vegan diet | PBD associated with reductions in body weight. fat mass, and improved insulin resistance in overweight adults. | |
| Beauchesne et al. (2018) [ | USA | CR | – | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD emphasizing raw fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes; excluding all animal products, added sugar, oil and salt, and highly processed foods | Vegan diet | Improved symptoms of cardiovascular disease and reduced medication burden in an 82-year-old man with cardiovascular disease. | |
| Wright et al. (2017) [ | New Zealand | RCT | 6 months | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Low-fat WFPBD that encouraged starches and avoided refined oils and animal products. Authors discouraged high-fat plant-foods and processed foods. | Vegan diet | WFPBD significantly improved BMI, cholesterol, and other risk factors in patients with metabolic disorders or heart disease. | |
| Null and Pennesi (2017) [ | USA | SGT | 12 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Anti-inflammatory PBD with 70% raw and 30% lightly cooked foods, eliminating refined carbohydrates, dairy, meat, poultry, and shellfish. | Vegan diet | A PBD along with other lifestyle and behavior modifications may provide benefits for moderate to severe depression and anxiety. | |
| Gonciulea and Sellmeyer (2017) [ | USA | RCT | 6 weeks | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Authors compared four different diets, including a soy and a non-soy PBD. Description refers to the non-soy PBD emphasizing grains, vegetables, fruits, and nuts. Eggs and dairy included. | Lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet | A soy and a non-soy plant-based diet both reduced total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein. |
| Evans et al. (2017) [ | USA | SGT | 3 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD focusing on fruits, vegetables, whole grains and legumes, seeds, and nuts. Animal products (including eggs) excluded. | Vegan diet | PBD improved total cholesterol in 74% of participants. 53% of participants lost weight. | |
| Choi et al. (2017) [ | USA | CR | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPBD including vegetables, fruits, whole grains, legumes, and nuts; excluding all animal-derived foods including eggs, dairy, and meat. | Vegan diet | WFPBD improved heart failure symptoms and left ventricular ejection fraction in a 79-year-old-man. | ||
| Yadav et al. (2016) [ | USA | RCT | 12 months | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Authors used a low-fat, plant-based diet based on starchy plant-foods. Meat, fish, eggs, dairy products, and vegetable oils prohibited. | Vegan diet | PBD did not significantly improve brain MRI, relapse rate, or disability in patients with multiple sclerosis. | |
| Massera et al. (2016) [ | USA | CR | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPBD including vegetables, fruits, whole grains, and legumes. No animal products. | Vegan diet | WFPBD improved heart failure symptoms and left ventricular ejection fraction. | ||
| Massera et al. (2015) [ | USA | CR | Yes | – | – | – | – | Yes | WFPB consisting of fruits, vegetables, whole grains, and legumes. Not clarified whether animal products were allowed or not. | Not attributable | WFPBD improved symptoms of angina, and cardiovascular risk factors in a 60-year-old man. | ||
| Macknin et al. (2015) [ | USA | Prospective randomized trial | 4 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | PBD emphasizing whole grains and plants; limiting avocado and nut intake. Subjects instructed to avoid animal products and added fat. | Vegan diet | A PBD beneficially affected BMI, blood pressure, and total cholesterol in children aged 9–18 years. | |
| Guthrie and Bogue (2015) [ | USA | SGT | 8 weeks | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Participants instructed to choose unrefined, low-glycemic whole plant foods as majority of intake. Animal products allowed as condiments. | Semi-vegetarian diet | The intervention was associated with significant weight loss but did not significantly alter serum lipids. |
| Clinton et al. (2015) [ | USA | RCT | 6 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | WFPB diet consisted of fruits, vegetables, legumes, and grains. Animal products were proscribed and the use of unrefined foods was encouraged. | Vegan diet | Significantly improved self-assessed measures of functional status among and pain in patient suffering from osteoarthritis. | |
| Bunner et al. (2015) [ | USA | RCT | 20 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Low-fat PBD omitting animal products, limiting fat intake, favoring low-glycemic index foods. The diet focused on vegetables, fruits, grains, and legumes. | Vegan diet | Improved body weight, electrochemical skin conductance, and pain in patients with type-2-diabetes and diabetic neuropathy. | |
| Turner-McGrievy et al. (2014) [ | USA | RCT | 8 weeks | Yes | – | – | – | – | – | – | Authors carefully differentiate the umbrella term PBD and discuss the different included dietary patterns, including a vegan diet, a vegetarian diet and a pesco-vegetarian diet | Not attributable | PBD approaches for weight loss interventions does not lead to participants who are significantly different from those who enroll in standard, behavioral weight loss studies. |
| Bunner et al. (2014) [ | USA | Randomized crossover study | 36 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | “Low-fat PBD” used as a synonym for a (low-fat) vegan diet in the abstract. Crossover trial with washout period. Dietary description referring to the vegan period only (16 weeks). | Vegan diet | PBD approach may be a useful part of migraine treatment to reduce worst headache pain and average headache intensity in adults with migraine. |
| Mishra et al. (2013) [ | USA | RCT | 18 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | – | “Low-fat PBD” used as a synonym for a (low-fat) vegan diet in the abstract and introduction. Vegan diet emphasizing whole grains, vegetables, legumes, and fruits. Animal products proscribed. | Vegan diet | A PBD intervention in a corporate setting improved body weight, plasma lipids, and, in individuals with diabetes, glycemic control. |
| Snyder et al. (2009) [ | USA | RCT | 1 year | Yes | – | – | – | – | Yes | – | Authors used a low-saturated fat PBD. Diet characterized by an increased daily vegetable and fruit intake and a reduced saturated fat intake (goal: ≤10% of total calories from saturated fat). Not clarified whether animal products were allowed or not. | Not attributable | Authors report recruitment challenges in older cancer survivors when offered a home-based multi-behavior intervention focusing on exercise and the aforementioned diet. |
| Merrill and Aldana (2009) [ | USA | RCT | 4 weeks | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD with little dairy intake and meat consumption. Participants encouraged to eat whole grains, legumes, vegetables, and fruits. Diet described by low fat, sugar and animal protein content. | Semi-vegetarian diet | Significant increase in daily intake of fruit, vegetables, and grains; significant decrease in dairy products and meat. |
| Frattaroli et al. (2008) [ | USA | SGT | 12 weeks | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Very low fat, plant-based, whole foods diet, high in complex carbohydrates, low in simple carbohydrates. Including fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes, and one cup of nonfat-dairy and egg whites. From: Daubenmier et al. [ | Lacto-ovo vegetarian diet | A combination of stress management, moderate exercise and diet improved cardiac risk factors, quality of life, and lifestyle behaviors in patients with coronary artery disease. |
| Frattaroli et al. (2008) [ | USA | RCT | 12 months | Yes | – | – | – | – | Yes | – | The term “(low-fat) plant-based diet” appears in the abstract and is used as a synonym for a “vegan diet” (including fruits, vegetables, whole grains), supplemented with soy, fish oil, vitamins, and selenium. | Not attributable | A combination of stress management, moderate exercise, and diet might be able to avoid or delay conventional treatment in patients with early-stage prostate-cancer. |
| Saxe et al. (2006) [ | USA | Single-group intervention trial | 6 months | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD encouraging whole grains, vegetables, fruits, and legumes and to decrease meat, dairy, and refined carbohydrates. No strict avoidance of animal products. | Semi-vegetarian diet | Adoption of a plant-based diet reinforced by stress management training may have therapeutic potential and attenuate disease progression in prostate cancer patients. |
| Gardner et al. (2005) [ | USA | RCT | 4 weeks | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Authors compared a plant-based low-fat diet to a convenience-oriented low-fat diet. The low-fat PBD emphasized vegetables, legumes, whole grains, and fruits. Diet included butter, cheese, and eggs. | Lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet | A low-fat diet including nutrient-dense plant-based foods beneficially affects total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein cholesterol. |
| Colombo et al. (2005) [ | Italy | RCT | 4.5 months | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Authors use the term PBD for a diet emphasizing fruits in vegetables. Detailed description in Berrino et al. [ | Semi-vegetarian diet | A plant-based diet improves serum fatty acid profile and decreases reactive oxygen metabolites. |
| Barnard et al. (2005) [ | USA | RCT | 14 weeks | Yes | No | No | No | No | Yes | The term “(low-fat) plant-based diet” appears in the abstract and is used as a synonym for a vegan diet consisting of vegetables, fruits, grains, and legumes. Animal products proscribed. | Vegan diet | An ad-libitum low-fat, vegan diet was associated with significant weight loss in overweight postmenopausal women. | |
| Koebnick et al. (2004) [ | Germany | RCT | 4 weeks | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD based on the Wholesome Nutrition recommendations (Hoffmann et al. [ | Lacto-ovo vegetarian diet | The aforementioned diet improved serum lipids and exerted hypocholesterolemic effects. |
| Spiller et al. (2003) [ | USA | RCT | 4 weeks | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | – | Yes | Yes | Authors compared the effects of different almonds in the context of a PBD. Participants encouraged to replace animal foods with plant foods. Consumption of meats, poultry, and eggs limited. | Semi-vegetarian diet | Unblanched almonds may play an effective role in cholesterol-lowering, plant-based diets. |
| Koertge et al. (2003) [ | USA | Single-group intervention trial | 12 months | Yes | Yes | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Low-fat, whole-food PBD.<10% of total calories from fat (predominantly fruits, vegetables, grains, legumes, nonfat dairy, and egg whites). | Semi-vegetarian diet | A combination of exercise, diet, social support, and stress management improved plasma lipids, blood pressure, body weight, and exercise capacity. |
| Saxe et al. (2001) [ | USA | Single-group intervention trial | 4 months | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD low in saturated fat and high in fiber, emphasizing whole grains, legumes, vegetables, seeds, and fruit. Processed and refined products and foods of animal origin strictly limited. | Semi-vegetarian diet | A plant-based diet in conjunction with stress reduction decreased the rate of PSA increase in patients with recurrent prostate cancer. |
| Yamashita et al. (1998) [ | Australia | Two-group intervention trial | 16 weeks | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | PBD emphasizing soybean as the main source of protein (at least 5 days weekly). PBD was explicitly not vegetarian, but allowed chicken and fish. | Omnivorous diet | The aforementioned PBD and a meat-based diet equally lead to weight loss and metabolic benefits in overweight women. |
(“What makes a plant-based diet? An overview of plant-based dietary interventions”).
USA United States of America, RCT Randomized-controlled trial, CR Case report, SGT Singe-group trial, PBD Plant-based diet, WFPBD Whole-food plant-based diet.
Fig. 3Assignment of the intervention diets to one of five pre-defined dietary groups (including a vegan diet, a lacto-ovo-vegetarian diet, a pesco-vegetarian diet or a semi-vegetarian diet).
Based on missing or inconclusive data, assignment was not possible in few cases.
Fig. 4Template: the plant-based dietary intervention reporting checklist.