| Literature DB >> 36235761 |
Jana Daher1, Moriah Mallick1, Dalia El Khoury1.
Abstract
Athletes represent a major part of dietary supplement users. This scoping review aims to explore the prevalence of dietary supplement use among athletes worldwide, most commonly used supplements, sources of information on dietary supplements and their reasons for use of these supplements. PubMed, CINAHL, MEDLINE, and PsycInfo were searched for original research articles. Studies were included if they involved athletes, identified the prevalence of dietary supplement use, and were published after 2017. A total of 26 articles were reviewed. Prevalence of dietary supplement use varied among articles, but sex-based differences related to the types of used dietary supplements existed. Generally, the findings were consistent in terms of reasons for use and sources of information. Unfortunately, the lack of homogeneity regarding the definition of dietary supplements, definition of use, reporting timeframes, and data collection methods complicates the attempt to compare the findings among studies.Entities:
Keywords: athletes; dietary supplements; prevalence; reasons for use; sources of information; sports nutrition
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36235761 PMCID: PMC9570738 DOI: 10.3390/nu14194109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Figure 1Selection of sources of evidence.
Figure 2Summary of studies’ demographics.
Figure 3Reporting timeframes across studies.
Summary of studies with prevalence and most used dietary supplements.
| Publication-Country | Target Population | Age | Sex | Data Collection Method | Prevalence (Defined Use) | Most Used Supplements |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) | Elite athletes (Individual & team sports) | 15–66 | Total: 504 | Questionnaire | 62% | M: Protein supplements. |
| Baltazar-Martins et al. (2019) | Elite athletes (Individual & team sports) | NC | Total: 527 | Questionnaire | 64% | Proteins; amino acids/ Branched chain amino acids; multivitamins. |
| Barrack et al. (2022) | NCAA Division I athletes | NR | Total: 557 | Survey | 45% | M: Protein/amino acid supplements. |
| Barrack et al. (2021) | Elite collegiate endurance runners | 18–22 | Total: 135 | Survey | 79% | Multivitamin/minerals; iron. |
| Barrack et al. (2020) | Preadolescent endurance runners | 13.2 ± 0.9 | Total: 2113 | Web-based Survey (past year) | 26% | Sport foods; multivitamin/minerals. |
| Caraballo et al. (2020) | Elite sailors | 12–17 | Total: 42 | Questionnaire (General and current) | 50% | M: Isotonic drinks; caffeine. |
| Domínguez et al. (2020) | Heavyweight and lightweight rowers | 23 ± 3 | Total: 20 | Questionnaire (general and current—during the sports season) | 100% | Iron; caffeine; β-alanine, energy bars; vitamin supplements; and isotonic drinks. |
| Graybeal et al. (2022) | Endurance cyclists, runners, and triathletes. | 39.4 ± 13.5 | Total: 200 | Digital questionnaire (current use) | 78% | Multivitamin; electrolytes; vitamin D; protein. |
| Hackett (2022) | Bodybuilders | ≥18 years | Total: 235 | Online survey (off season and 6 weeks before a competition) | 96% | Creatine monohydrate; whey protein. |
| Hurst et al. | Team and individual sports athletes | 20.8 ± 4.5 | Total: 557 | Survey (current use) | 53% | Ergogenic supplements. |
| Jovanov et al. (2019) | Team and individual sports athletes | 15–18 | Total: 348 | Survey (current use) | 82% | M: Whey protein, creatine, amino acids, caffeine, and NO reactor. |
| Madden et al. (2018) | Wheelchair rugby athletes | 36.3 ± 9.5 | Total: 42 | Questionnaire (past three months) | M: 91% | Electrolytes, sport bars, vitamin D, protein powder, and MVMM (multivitamin multimineral). |
| Mata et al. (2021) | Fencers | 21.8 ± 5.9 years | Total: 49 | Questionnaire (General and current) | 47% | Sports drinks, vitamin C, sport bars, caffeine. |
| Montuori et al. (2021) | Bodybuilders | >18 | Total: 107 | Questionnaire/survey (general and current) | 82% | NR |
| Muñoz et al. (2020) | Handball players | NR | Total: 187 | Online Questionnaire (current use) | 60% | Sports drinks, energy bars and caffeine-containing products. |
| Oliveira et al. (2022) | Elite football players | Median age: 24 | Total: 103 | Questionnaire | 82% | Vitamin D, omega-3 fatty acids, and protein (including whey protein and casein). |
| Roy et al. (2021) | Varsity athletes | 20.5 ± 1.8 | Total: 302 | Questionnaire | 58% | Protein, vitamins, minerals, and carbohydrate supplements. |
| Sánchez-Oliver et al. (2021) | Rugby players | M: 24.3 ± 5.0 | Total: 144 | Questionnaire (general) | 65% | Whey protein, caffeine, sport drinks, energy bars, creatine monohydrate, BCAAs, and glutamine.M: Whey protein, creatine monohydrate, and glutamine. |
| Sassone et al. (2019) | NCAA Division I athletes | 18–26 | Total: 557 | Survey (past year) | 45% | Pre-workout & herbal supplements. |
| Sekulic et al. (2019) | Professional team-sport athletes | 22.11 ± 3.37 | Total: 912 | Questionnaire (General and current) | 13% | Vitamins/minerals, isotonic drinks, energy bars, iron, recovery supplements, carbohydrates, proteins/amino acids. |
| Shoshan et al. (2021) | Football players | 16.9 ± 1.2 | Total: 102 | Online questionnaire (general and current) | 60% (protein supplements)29% (pre-workout supplements) | NR |
| Tabata et al. (2020) | Track and field elite athletes | Junior athletes: 17.7 ± 1.1 years | Total: 574 | Pre participation medical form (current use) | 64% | Amino acids, vitamins, minerals, proteins. |
| Vento & Wardenaar (2020) | NCAA I collegiate student athletes | 20 ± 1.6 years | Total: 138 | Questionnaire (Past year) | 100% | Multivitamin and mineral supplements, and single vitamins or minerals. |
| Ventura Comes et al. (2018) | National & international squash players | International players: | Total: 42 | Questionnaire—survey (General and current) | lnternational athletes: 100% | Ergogenic aids C, sports food. |
| Waller et al. (2019) | Individual and team sports’ athletes | 20.4 ± 4.5 | Total: 94 | Online questionnaire (past year) | 87% | Sports drinks, caffeine, protein powder, and sports bars. |
| Wangdi et al. (2021) a | Individual and team sports’ athletes | 27.6 ± 9.8 | Total: 80 | Online questionnaire (current and previous use) | 11% (reported current use)11% (reported previous use) | N/A |
Percentages were rounded to the nearest whole number. DS: Dietary supplements; F: Females; M: Males; NR: Not reported; NC: Not clear; a This study investigated tart cherry use only.
Reasons for dietary supplement use reported by athletes.
| Publication | Reasons for Dietary Supplement Use (% of Participants that Reported the Reason *) |
|---|---|
| Barrack et al. (2020) [ | M: Increasing strength/power, increasing muscle mass. |
| Carabello et al. (2020) [ | M: Improving performance (65%) and physical appearance (15%). |
| Domínguez et al. (2020) [ | Improving recovery (80%), health reasons. |
| Graybeal et al. (2022) [ | Improving performance and health, meeting nutrient requirements. |
| Jovanov et al. (2019) [ | M: Improving athletic performance (19%) |
| Madden et al. (2018) [ | Performance—medical/health |
| Mata et al. (2021) [ | Improving performance (34%), improving health (29%) |
| Muñoz et al. (2020) [ | Enhancing sports performance (54%), improving health (13%), and improving physical appearance (11%). |
| Oliveira et al. (2022) [ | Staying healthy (66%), accelerating recovery (58%), increasing energy reducing fatigue (54%). |
| Roy et al. (2021) [ | Maintaining good health (83%), increasing energy (71%), promoting recovery (69%), correcting or preventing micronutrient deficiencies (60%) and supplying convenient forms of energy and/or macronutrients (58%) |
| Sánchez-Oliver et al. (2021) [ | Improving sport performance (62%), preventing nutritional deficits (14%) |
| Vento & Wardenaar (2020) [ | Improving health and performance. |
| Waller et al. (2019) [ | Enhancing recovery (63%), maintaining health (59%), and improving energy (50%) |
| Wangdi et al. (2021) [ | Improving recovery (75%), sleep and immunity (30%), and general health (30%) |
M: Males; F: Females; * Percentages were rounded to the nearest whole number; * Percentages were not reported for studies that split data into groups.
Sources of information on dietary supplements reported by athletes.
| Studies (% of Participants that Reported the Reason *) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Source of Information | Reported by Males | Reported by Females | Reported by All Participants (In Case Sex-Based Differences Were Not Reported) |
| Doctor/health professional | Mata et al. (2021) [ | Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) [ | Domínguez et al. (2020) [ |
| Nutritionist/dietitian | Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) [ | Carabello et al. (2020) [ | Montuori et al. (2021) [ |
| Coach/trainer | Barrack et al. (2020) [ | Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) [ | Domínguez et al. (2020) [ |
| Internet/social media | Barrack et al. (2020) [ | Madden et al. (2018) [ | Graybeal et al. (2022) [ |
| Teammates | Barrack et al. (2020) [ | Madden et al. (2018) [ | Roy et al. (2021) [ |
| Family/friends | Carabello et al. (2020) [ | Barrack et al. (2020) [ | Roy et al. (2021) [ |
| Self-education | Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) [ | Aguilar-Navarro et al. (2021) [ | Baltazar-Martins et al. (2019) [ |
| Scientific research | Graybeal et al. (2022) [ | ||
* Percentages were rounded to the nearest whole number. * Percentages were not reported for studies that split data into groups.