Do Personalized Nutrition Interventions Improve Dietary Intake and Risk Factors in Adults With Elevated Cardiovascular Disease Risk Factors? A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials.

IF 5.9 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Nutrition reviews Pub Date : 2024-10-17 DOI:10.1093/nutrit/nuae149
Victoria Cross, Jordan Stanford, María Gómez-Martín, Clare E Collins, Seaton Robertson, Erin D Clarke
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Abstract

Context: Dietary modifications can improve cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors. Personalized nutrition (PN) refers to individualized nutrition care based on genetic, phenotypic, medical, behavioral, and/or lifestyle characteristics. PN may be beneficial in improving CVD risk factors, including diet. However, this has not been reviewed previously.

Objective: The aim was to evaluate the effectiveness of PN interventions on CVD risk factors and diet in adults at elevated CVD risk.

Data sources: Six databases were searched for randomized controlled trials published between 2000 and 2023 that tested the impact of PN interventions on CVD risk factors in people at elevated risk.

Data extraction: Risk of bias was assessed using the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics Quality Criteria checklist. Data synthesis of eligible articles included participant characteristics, intervention details, and change in primary CVD risk factor outcomes, including blood pressure (BP), plasma lipids, and CVD risk score, and secondary risk factors, including anthropometric outcomes and diet quality. Random-effects meta-analyses were conducted to explore weighted mean differences (WMDs) in change or final mean values for studies with comparable data (studies with dietary counseling interventions) for outcomes including BP, blood lipids, and anthropometric measurements.

Data analysis: Of 7676 identified articles, 16 articles representing 15 studies met the inclusion criteria. Studies included between 40 and 563 participants and reported outcomes for CVD risk factors, including hyperlipidemia (n = 5), elevated BP (n = 3), overweight/obesity (n = 1), and multiple risk factors (n = 6). Risk of bias was low. Results suggested potential benefit of PN on systolic BP (WMD: -1.91; 95% CI: -3.51, -0.31 mmHg) and diastolic BP (WMD: -1.49; 95% CI: -2.39, -0.58 mmHg) and dietary intake in individuals at high CVD risk. Results were inconsistent for plasma lipid and anthropometric outcomes.

Conclusion: Results were promising for PN interventions that used dietary counseling on CVD risk factors in at-risk individuals. However, further evidence for other personalization methods is required, including improving methodological quality and longer study duration in future PN interventions.

Systematic review registration: OpenScience Framework (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/SHVWP).

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个性化营养干预能改善心血管疾病风险因素升高的成年人的膳食摄入量和风险因素吗?随机对照试验的系统回顾和元分析》。
背景:饮食调整可改善心血管疾病(CVD)的风险因素。个性化营养(PN)是指基于基因、表型、医疗、行为和/或生活方式特征的个性化营养护理。个性化营养可能有益于改善心血管疾病的风险因素,包括饮食。然而,此前尚未对此进行过综述:目的:评估 PN 干预对心血管疾病风险因素和饮食的有效性:在六个数据库中检索了 2000 年至 2023 年间发表的随机对照试验,这些试验测试了 PN 干预措施对心血管疾病风险升高人群中心血管疾病风险因素的影响:采用营养与饮食科学院质量标准检查表评估偏倚风险。符合条件的文章的数据综合包括参与者特征、干预细节、主要心血管疾病风险因素结果(包括血压、血浆脂质和心血管疾病风险评分)和次要风险因素(包括人体测量结果和饮食质量)的变化。我们进行了随机效应荟萃分析,以探讨具有可比数据的研究(有饮食咨询干预的研究)在血压、血脂和人体测量等结果的变化或最终平均值方面的加权平均差(WMDs):在 7676 篇已确定的文章中,16 篇文章代表 15 项研究符合纳入标准。研究纳入了 40 至 563 名参与者,并报告了心血管疾病风险因素的结果,包括高脂血症(5 例)、血压升高(3 例)、超重/肥胖(1 例)和多种风险因素(6 例)。偏倚风险较低。结果表明,PN 对心血管疾病高危人群的收缩压(WMD:-1.91;95% CI:-3.51,-0.31 mmHg)、舒张压(WMD:-1.49;95% CI:-2.39,-0.58 mmHg)和膳食摄入量有潜在益处。血浆脂质和人体测量结果不一致:对高危人群进行心血管疾病风险因素膳食咨询的 PN 干预结果令人鼓舞。然而,还需要其他个性化方法的进一步证据,包括提高方法学质量和延长未来PN干预的研究时间:系统综述注册:开放科学框架 (https://doi.org/10.17605/OSF.IO/SHVWP)。
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来源期刊
Nutrition reviews
Nutrition reviews 医学-营养学
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
1.60%
发文量
121
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Nutrition Reviews is a highly cited, monthly, international, peer-reviewed journal that specializes in the publication of authoritative and critical literature reviews on current and emerging topics in nutrition science, food science, clinical nutrition, and nutrition policy. Readers of Nutrition Reviews include nutrition scientists, biomedical researchers, clinical and dietetic practitioners, and advanced students of nutrition.
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