| Literature DB >> 35406011 |
Simone O'Neill1, Michelle Minehan1, Catherine R Knight-Agarwal1, Murray Turner1.
Abstract
This systematic literature review examined whole food or whole diet interventions to treat depression. The inclusion criteria encompassed adults, depression, a recognized depression scale and a whole food or diet intervention. APA PsychINFO, CINAHL, the Cochrance Central Register of Controlled Trails, MEDLINE and Scopus were searched for original research addressing diet as a treatment for depression in adult populations. The quality of the study was assessed using the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Quality Criteria Checklist. Seven studies; with 49,156 participants; met the eligibility criteria. All these studies found positive outcomes with depression levels decreasing after dietary intervention. The calculated effect size varied from small (Cohen's d = 0.32) to very large (Cohen's d = 1.82). The inconsistent nature of the studies limited the synthesis of the data. Recommendations are provided to enhance future study design and measurement outcomes. Overall, the findings show a positive result for diets that promote an increased intake of fresh produce, wholegrains, low-fat dairy and lean protein sources, while also decreasing the intake of processed and high-fat foods. No funding was provided for this review. The protocol for this review is registered with PROSPERO (CRD42020210426).Entities:
Keywords: depression; dietary intervention; whole diet; whole food
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35406011 PMCID: PMC9003461 DOI: 10.3390/nu14071398
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of studies included in the review.
Quality assessment of included studies.
| Author and Year | Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4 | Q5 | Q6 | Q7 | Q8 | Q9 | Q10 | Overall Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assaf et al. (2016) [ | U | Y | U | N | U | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Neutral |
| Francis et al. (2019) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Positive |
| Jacka et al. (2017) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Positive |
| Kontogianni et al. (2020) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | Positive |
| Lindseth et al. (2015) [ | Y | U | N | U | Y | U | Y | N | U | Y | Neutral |
| McMillan et al. (2011) [ | U | N | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | N | Y | N | Neutral |
| Park et al. (2020) [ | Y | Y | Y | Y | U | Y | Y | N | Y | Y | Positive |
Y—Yes (criteria met); N—No (criteria not met); U—Unclear.
Characteristics of Included Studies.
| Reference, Country | Population, Eligibility Criteria | Sample Size | Intervention | Depression and Diet Measures | Primary Statistical Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assaf et al. (2016); | Women aged 50–79; | Reduced fat, healthy diet intervention. | RAND 36-Item Health Survey Subscale; Dietary Compliance—FFQ | RAND 36 DM mean score change (−0.05) significantly greater than mean score change CG (−0.12) Mean difference (0.07 [95%CI 0.02 to 0.12; | |
| Francis et al. (2019); Australia [ | Individuals aged 17–35; with a score of 7 or more on the DASS-21 and greater than 57 on the DFS with antidepressant use greater than 2 weeks if relevant | Diet based on AGTHE and Mediterranean diet (decreased refined carbohydrate, fatty or processed meats and soft drinks). Education delivered by a qualified dietitian: face to face contact at baseline and day 21; phone contact at days 7, 14 and 3 months. | CESD-R; DASS-21; Dietary Compliance—Diet Compliance Score Questionnaire | CESD-R (DC/HD—day 21) significantly lower than HD at day 21 (F[1.75] = 7.792, | |
| Jacka et al. (2017); Australia [ | Individuals aged >18 years that meet DSM-IV diagnostic criteria, have a score of 18+ on MADRS and a score of <75 on a dietary screening tool | Improved diet quality with recommended servings specified for 12 key food types. Seven 1-h individual dietary support sessions—weekly for first four weeks, and then fortnightly for six weeks; delivered by a clinical dietitian | MADRS; Secondary Measures—HADS and POMS; dietary compliance—ModiMedDiet via 7-day food diaries | MADRS—T(60.7) = 4.38, | |
| Kontogianni et al. (2020); UK [ | Individuals aged 40–65 years with documented grade I or II hypertension | High antioxidant diet: 4 week ‘washout’ period with <2 fruit and vegetable portions daily plus exclusion of berries and dark chocolate. An 8 week period with consumption of 6 portions of fruit and vegetable (including a portion of berries) and 50 g of dark chocolate daily. Group education baseline and week 4. Qualifications of professionals delivering intervention not stated. | PANAS; BDI-II (21-item scale); DASS-21 (21-item scale); dietary compliance—4-day food diary at weeks 4 and 12 | BDI-II;—significant between-group difference ( | |
| Lindseth et al. (2015); USA [ | University students aged > 18 years | High tryptophan diet: 4 days of meals that met EER and US RDA (5% variance). Caffeine limited to 100 mg/d. LTD phase—5 mg/kg body weight/d of tryptophan; HTD phase—10 mg/kg body weight/day of tryptophan. All meals provided in dining room, 2 week washout period between phases. Intervention conducted by dietitian, nurse and psychologist. | Zung’s SDS; PANAS direct observation of meal consumption | Within-subject analysis found low levels of tryptophan intake associated with increased rate of depression (paired | |
| McMillan et al. (2011); Australia [ | Females aged 19–30 years | Healthy diet intervention. Increased fruit, vegetables, fatty fish, nuts, seeds, low-fat natural dairy and wholegrain cereals; excluded red meat, refined sugars and flour, pre-packaged and processed foods, caffeinated products, soft drinks and condiments. | POMS; Bond-Lader VAS; dietary compliance—daily food diary | No significant change for depression; mean (±SD); Pre 21.92 ± 7.23; Post 18.83 ± 5.44 | |
| Park et al. (2020); Korea [ | Individuals aged between 20–30 years with a CES-D score ≥ 21 | High flavonoid whole food intervention. Participants continued usual exercise and diet, limited HF and high-sucrose foods, fruits, juice, tea, jams and alcohol. 30–60 min before breakfast and dinner consumed 190 mL juice that naturally provided high (FR 157.9 mg/100 g) or low (FL 28.4 mg/100 g) level of flavonoids. | CES-D; dietary compliance—24 h dietary recall and FFQ | CES-D scores decreased to <20 points. Multiple regression analysis showed CES-D in FR decreased significantly ( |
DM, dietary modification; CG, control group; FFQ, Food Frequency Questionnaire; DC, Dietary Change; AGTHE, Australian Guide to Healthy Eating; HD, Habitual Diet; CESD-R, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale—Revised; DASS-21, Depression, Anxiety Stress Scale-21; BMI, Body Mass Index; DSM-IV, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders—IV; MADRS, Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; DSG, Dietary Support Group; SSCG, Social Support Control Group; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; POMS, The Profile of Mood States; HPD, High Polyphenol Diet Group; LPD, Low Polyphenol Diet Group; PANAS, the Positive and Negative Affect Scale; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory-II; PA, Positive Affect; EER, Estimated Energy Requirements; US, United States; RDA, Recommended Dietary Allowance; LTD, Low Tryptophan Diet; HTD, High Tryptophan Diet; SDS, Self-Rating Depression Scale; NC, No Change; Bond-Lader VAS, Visual Analogue Scales; SD, Standard Deviation; CES-D, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; HF, High Fat; LF, Low Fat; FR, Flavanoid Rich; FL, Flavanoid Low.
Depression Measures Utilised.
| Author and Year | RAND36 | BDI-II | Bond and Lader VAS | CES-D/CESD-R | DASS-21 | HADS | MADRS | PANAS | POMS/POMS-A | Zung’s SDS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assaf et al. (2016) [ | √ | |||||||||
| Francis et al. (2019) [ | √ | X | X | |||||||
| Jacka et al. (2017) [ | X | √ | X | |||||||
| Kontogianni et al. (2020) [ | √ | X+ | X | |||||||
| Lindseth et al. (2015) [ | X | √ | ||||||||
| McMillan et al. (2011) [ | √ | √ | ||||||||
| Park et al. (2020) [ | √ |
√—Primary Measure of Depression; X—Secondary Measure of Depression; +—Introduced 9 Months into Study.