Department of Nutrition, Harvard School of Public Health, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2012 Dec;96(6):1262-73. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.112.044040. Epub 2012 Oct 17.
Prior studies of α-linolenic acid (ALA), a plant-derived omega-3 (n-3) fatty acid, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk have generated inconsistent results.
We conducted a meta-analysis to summarize the evidence regarding the relation of ALA and CVD risk.
We searched multiple electronic databases through January 2012 for studies that reported the association between ALA (assessed as dietary intake or as a biomarker in blood or adipose tissue) and CVD risk in prospective and retrospective studies. We pooled the multivariate-adjusted RRs comparing the top with the bottom tertile of ALA using random-effects meta-analysis, which allowed for between-study heterogeneity.
Twenty-seven original studies were identified, including 251,049 individuals and 15,327 CVD events. The overall pooled RR was 0.86 (95% CI: 0.77, 0.97; I² = 71.3%). The association was significant in 13 comparisons that used dietary ALA as the exposure (pooled RR: 0.90; 95% CI: 0.81, 0.99; I² = 49.0%), with similar but nonsignificant trends in 17 comparisons in which ALA biomarkers were used as the exposure (pooled RR: 0.80; 95% CI: 0.63, 1.03; I² = 79.8%). An evaluation of mean participant age, study design (prospective compared with retrospective), exposure assessment (self-reported diet compared with biomarker), and outcome [fatal coronary heart disease (CHD), nonfatal CHD, total CHD, or stroke] showed that none were statistically significant sources of heterogeneity.
In observational studies, higher ALA exposure is associated with a moderately lower risk of CVD. The results were generally consistent for dietary and biomarker studies but were not statistically significant for biomarker studies. However, the high unexplained heterogeneity highlights the need for additional well-designed observational studies and large randomized clinical trials to evaluate the effects of ALA on CVD.
先前关于植物源性 ω-3(n-3)脂肪酸α-亚麻酸(ALA)与心血管疾病(CVD)风险的研究结果并不一致。
我们进行了一项荟萃分析,以总结 ALA 与 CVD 风险之间关系的证据。
我们通过电子数据库搜索,截至 2012 年 1 月,检索了前瞻性和回顾性研究中报告 ALA(通过饮食摄入或血液或脂肪组织中的生物标志物评估)与 CVD 风险之间关联的研究。我们使用随机效应荟萃分析汇总了比较 ALA 最高和最低三分位的多变量调整 RR,该分析允许研究间存在异质性。
共确定了 27 项原始研究,包括 251049 名个体和 15327 例 CVD 事件。总体汇总 RR 为 0.86(95%CI:0.77,0.97;I²=71.3%)。在 13 项以饮食 ALA 为暴露因素的比较中,该关联具有统计学意义(汇总 RR:0.90;95%CI:0.81,0.99;I²=49.0%),而在以 ALA 生物标志物为暴露因素的 17 项比较中,该趋势相似但无统计学意义(汇总 RR:0.80;95%CI:0.63,1.03;I²=79.8%)。评估参与者平均年龄、研究设计(前瞻性与回顾性)、暴露评估(自我报告的饮食与生物标志物)以及结局(致命性冠心病、非致命性冠心病、总冠心病或中风)表明,均无统计学显著的异质性来源。
在观察性研究中,较高的 ALA 暴露与 CVD 风险的适度降低相关。饮食和生物标志物研究的结果基本一致,但生物标志物研究的结果无统计学意义。然而,高度无法解释的异质性突出表明需要更多设计良好的观察性研究和大型随机临床试验,以评估 ALA 对 CVD 的影响。