| Literature DB >> 34959772 |
Katja A Schönenberger1,2, Anne-Catherine Schüpfer1, Viktoria L Gloy3, Paul Hasler4, Zeno Stanga1, Nina Kaegi-Braun5, Emilie Reber1.
Abstract
Various nutritional therapies have been proposed in rheumatoid arthritis, particularly diets rich in ω-3 fatty acids, which may lead to eicosanoid reduction. Our aim was to investigate the effect of potentially anti-inflammatory diets (Mediterranean, vegetarian, vegan, ketogenic) on pain. The primary outcome was pain on a 10 cm visual analogue scale. Secondary outcomes were C-reactive protein levels, erythrocyte sedimentation rate, health assessment questionnaire, disease activity score 28, tender/swollen joint counts, weight, and body mass index. We searched MEDLINE (OVID), Embase (Elsevier), and CINAHL for studies published from database inception to 12 November 2021. Two authors independently assessed studies for inclusion, extracted study data, and assessed the risk of bias. We performed a meta-analysis with all eligible randomized controlled trials using RevMan 5. We used mean differences or standardized mean differences and the inverse variance method of pooling using a random-effects model. The search retrieved 564 unique publications, of which we included 12 in the systematic review and 7 in the meta-analysis. All studies had a high risk of bias and the evidence was very low. The main conclusion is that anti-inflammatory diets resulted in significantly lower pain than ordinary diets (-9.22 mm; 95% CI -14.15 to -4.29; p = 0.0002; 7 RCTs, 326 participants).Entities:
Keywords: Mediterranean diet; anti-inflammatory diet; arthralgia; ketogenic diet; pain; rheumatoid arthritis; vegan diet; vegetarian diet
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959772 PMCID: PMC8706441 DOI: 10.3390/nu13124221
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram (according to [16]).
Study characteristics.
| Author | Population: | Intervention | Diet | Outcome, Mean (SD) | Study Design | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | ||||||
| Abendroth | MED: | 2 weeks MED | MED according to Leitzmann [ | Pain, mm | 35 (27); 33 (26) | NA | non-randomized intervention study |
| Adam | AID + corn oil: | WD vs. AID | AID: modified lactovegetarian diet, only plant-derived fats and oils, no egg yolk, dairy products with reduced fat, meat maximum 2 × 120 g/week | AID + corn oil | WD + corn oil | RCT | |
| García-Morales | MED: | 24 weeks | MED: individualized according to Harris-Benedict BMR [ | MED: | Control: | RCT | |
| Hafström | Vegan: | 1 year | Gluten-free vegan: vegetables, root vegetables, nuts and fruits, buckwheat, millet, corn, rice, and sunflower seeds. Unshelled sesame seeds in the form of sesame milk were a daily source of calcium. | Pain, mm | 46 (19); 33 (28) | 46 (21); 44 (26) | RCT |
| Ingegnoli | N/A | Pain | Univariate analysis: association between outcomes (dependent variables) and the adherence to | observational, cross-sectional study | |||
| Kjeldsen-Kragh | Vegetarian: | 13 months vegetarian | Vegetarian: initial 7–10 days fast (800–1260 kJ/day), afterwards reintroduction of a new food item every 2nd day, during the first 3–5 months no gluten, meat, fish, eggs, dairy products, refined sugar, citrus fruits, salt, strong spices, preservatives, alcoholic beverages, tea, coffee, afterwards reintroduction of milk, other dairy products | Pain, mm | NA; 36 (27) | NA; 55 (24) | RCT |
| McDougall | Vegan: | 4 weeks | Low-fat, vegan diet: no animal products or added fats and oils of any kind, ad libitum menus based on common starches, such as beans, breads, corn, pastas, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and rice, fresh or fresh-frozen fruits and vegetables, dehydrated cereals, soups, main entrees | Pain, mm | 49 (20); 34 (20) | NA | uncontrolled, pre-post intervention study |
| McKellar | MED: | 6 months | MED: 6-week cookery course on Medi-terranean-type diet, weekly 2 h cookery class, written information on a Medi-terranean-type diet, healthy eating and recipes promoting fruits, vegetables and legumes, substitution of saturated fat with olive oil or spreads containing olive oil | Median: | Median: | non-randomized intervention study | |
| Nenonen | Vegan: | 2–3 months | Vegan living food diet according to Hänninen [ | Pain, mm | 36 (14); 23 (18) | 38 (15); 25 (13) | RCT |
| Sköldstam | Vegetarian: | 9 weeks | Vegetarian: initial 7–10 days fast (800 kJ/day, 3 L fruit and vegetable juices), followed by plain lactovegetarian diet, no animal or fish protein (including egg), yoghurt allowed freely, fresh milk and cream discouraged, no alcohol, tobacco, coffee, tea, restriction on salt, sugar, white flour, small quantities of grain products | Pain, mm | 35 (19), Δ-12 (32) | 27 (17), Δ-3 (21) | RCT |
| Sköldstam | 4 months | Vegan: initial 7–10 days fast, followed by diet excluding meat, fish, eggs and dairy products, refined sugar, corn flour, salt, strong spices, preservatives, alcoholic beverages, tea, coffee | Pain, mm | 45 (NA); 36 (NA) | NA | uncontrolled, pre-post intervention study | |
| Sköldstam | MED: | 12 weeks | Cretan MED according to de Lorgeril [ | Pain, mm | 32 (20); 20 (13) | 31 (20); 34 (21) | RCT |
AID, anti-inflammatory diet; BMR, basal metabolic rate; CRP, C-reactive protein; DAS28, disease activity score 28 [18]; DAS28-CRP, disease activity score 28 based on C-reactive protein [19]; DEP, dynamic exercise program; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; HAQ, health assessment questionnaire [17]; IQR, interquartile range; Mdn, median; MED, Mediterranean diet; NA, not applicable or not available; p, portions; RA, rheumatoid arthritis; RCT, randomized clinical trial; SJC, swollen joint count; TJC, tender joint count; WD, Western diet; y, years.
Figure 2Forest plot summarizing the effect of anti-inflammatory diets on pain.
Figure 3Forest plot summarizing the effect of anti-inflammatory diets on C-reactive protein levels.
Risk of bias assessment of randomized controlled trials for the primary outcome pain.
| Author | Randomization | Deviations from | Missing Outcome Data | Outcome | Selection of the | Overall |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Adam et al. | Some concerns | Low | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| García-Morales | Low | Low | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| Hafström et al. | Some concerns | Low | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| Kjeldsen-Kragh | Some concerns | Low | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| Nenonen et al. | Some concerns | Some concerns | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| Sköldstam et al. | Low | Some concerns | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
| Sköldstam et al. | Low | Some concerns | Low | High | Some concerns | High |
Risk of bias assessment of non-randomized studies for the primary outcome pain.
| Author | Confounding | Selection of Participants | Intervention Classification | Deviations from Interventions | Missing Outcome Data | Outcome Measurement | Selection of the Reported Result | Overall Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abendroth et al. 2010 [ | Serious | Low | Moderate | No information | No information | Serious | Moderate | Serious |
| Ingegnoli et al. 2020 [ | Serious | Moderate | Low | No information | Low | Serious | Low | Serious |
| McDougall et al. 2002 [ | Low | Low | Low | Low | Low | Serious | Low | Serious |
| McKellar et al. 2007 [ | Low | Low | Low | No information | Low | Serious | Low | Serious |
| Sköldstam 1986 [ | Low | Low | No information | Low | No information | Serious | Low | Serious |
Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) rating.
| Outcome | Certainty Assessment | No. of Patients | Absolute | Certainty | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. of | Study | Risk | Inconsistency | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other | Anti-Inflam- | Ordinary | |||
| Pain | 7 | randomized | very | not | not | serious b | none | 172 | 154 | MD 9.22 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| CRP | 5 | randomized | serious c | not | not | very | none | 140 | 127 | MD 2.51 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| ESR | 4 | randomized | serious e | not | not | serious f | none | 95 | 82 | MD 2.9 lower | ⊕⊕◯◯ |
| HAQ | 4 | randomized | very | not | not | serious f | none | 108 | 94 | MD 0.20 lower | ⊕⊕◯◯ |
| SJC | 4 | randomized | very | serious i | not | not | none | 112 | 102 | SMD 0.6 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| TJC | 4 | randomized | very | very | not | serious f | none | 110 | 102 | SMD 0.39 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| Weight loss | 6 | randomized trials | serious k | very serious j | not serious | not serious | none | 152 | 134 | MD 3.73 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
| BMI decrease | 4 | randomized trials | serious l | very serious j | not serious | not serious | none | 93 | 99 | MD 1.28 lower | ⊕◯◯◯ |
CRP, C-reactive protein; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; HAQ, health assessment questionnaire; MD, mean difference; SJC, swollen joint count; SMD, standardized mean difference; TJC, tender joint count. a All 7 trials had high risk of bias, overall. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 4 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 3 trials. In all 7 trials a high risk of bias was noted regarding the outcome measurement. b Imprecision was downgraded by 1 level because the 95% confidence interval of the mean difference was sufficiently wide that the estimate could also refute the effectiveness of the intervention assuming a clinically important difference of 7–11 units on the VAS. c All 5 trials had some concerns regarding the overall bias. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 3 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 2 trials. d Imprecision was downgraded by 2 levels because the 95% confidence interval of the mean difference was sufficiently wide that the estimate could also refute the effectiveness of the intervention and the sample size of the meta-analysis was too small. e All 4 trials had some concerns regarding the overall bias. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 1 trial. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 3 trials. f Imprecision was downgraded by 1 level because the 95% confidence interval of the mean difference was sufficiently wide that the estimate could also refute the effectiveness of the intervention. g All 4 trials had high risk of bias overall. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 2 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 1 trial. In all 4 trials high risk of bias was noted regarding the outcome measurement. h All 4 trials had high risk of bias overall. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 2 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 2 trial. In all 4 trials a high risk of bias was noted regarding the outcome measurement. i Inconsistency was downgraded by 1 level because the I² statistic may represent substantial heterogeneity. j Inconsistency was downgraded by 2 levels because the I² statistic may represent substantial heterogeneity and confidence intervals for the results of individual studies have poor overlap. k All 6 trials had some concerns regarding overall bias. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 3 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 3 trials. l All 4 trials had some concerns regarding the overall bias. Some concerns were noted regarding the randomization process in 2 trials. Some concerns were noted due to deviations from the intended intervention in 2 trials.