Händel Mina N, Heitmann Berit L, Abrahamsen Bo
Research Unit for Dietary Studies, Institute of Preventive Medicine and the Parker Institute, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Frederiksberg, Denmark; Institute of Clinical Research, Odense Patient Data Explorative Network, University of Southern Denmark, Odense, Denmark;
Research Unit for Dietary Studies, Institute of Preventive Medicine and the Parker Institute, Bispebjerg and Frederiksberg Hospital, Frederiksberg, Denmark; The Boden Institute of Obesity, Nutrition Exercise & Eating Disorders, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia; and National Institute of Public Health, University of Southern Denmark, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Am J Clin Nutr. 2015 Nov;102(5):1182-95. doi: 10.3945/ajcn.115.108456. Epub 2015 Oct 7.
The identification of detrimental dietary patterns early in life may contribute to reducing the high incidence of fracture among healthy children. However, information based on a systematic review of the effect of various dietary foods and nutrients on fracture risk is lacking.
We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies that examined the association between dietary intake or serum nutritional concentrations and childhood fractures.
Studies published up until June 2015 were identified on the basis of a literature search in Medline, Web of Science, and Scopus databases and by hand searching references by first author based on predefined inclusion criteria. A meta-analysis was carried out for case-control studies that examined differences in mean calcium intake in the case compared with the control group. Random-effects analysis was performed on the basis of the effect estimates derived as the differences in mean calcium intakes between cases and controls.
From a total of 1960 articles, we identified 18 observational studies, which were primarily case-control in design. Randomized controlled trials were absent, potentially because of unethical aspects related to the enrollment of children randomly assigned to certain dietary exposures and later fracture rates. Overall, fracture risk seemed to be associated with milk avoidance, high energy intake, high cheese intake, high intake of sugar-sweetened beverages, and no breastfeeding. The pooled effect size of the 9 case-control studies that examined mean calcium intake, which had appropriate data for the meta-analysis, showed no association (P = 0.99) with fair heterogeneity (I(2) = 69.3%, P = 0.001) with the use of the random-effects model.
On the basis of a systematic review of studies that were judged to be of high or medium quality, there is an indication that some nutritional factors seem to be associated with an increased fracture risk among children. The results may be inflated by selection bias, bias in diet reporting, or residual confounding. More high-quality longitudinal observational or intervention studies are needed on the subject.
在生命早期识别有害的饮食模式可能有助于降低健康儿童中高骨折发生率。然而,缺乏基于对各种膳食食物和营养素对骨折风险影响的系统评价的信息。
我们对观察性研究进行了系统评价和荟萃分析,这些研究探讨了饮食摄入量或血清营养浓度与儿童骨折之间的关联。
截至2015年6月发表的研究是基于在Medline、科学引文索引和Scopus数据库中进行的文献检索以及第一作者根据预定义的纳入标准手动检索参考文献而确定的。对病例对照研究进行了荟萃分析,这些研究比较了病例组与对照组的平均钙摄入量差异。基于病例组与对照组平均钙摄入量差异得出的效应估计值进行随机效应分析。
从总共1960篇文章中,我们识别出18项观察性研究,这些研究主要为病例对照设计。没有随机对照试验,这可能是由于与随机分配到某些饮食暴露的儿童登记及随后的骨折率相关的伦理问题。总体而言,骨折风险似乎与不喝牛奶、高能量摄入、高奶酪摄入量、高糖饮料摄入量以及未进行母乳喂养有关。9项检查平均钙摄入量的病例对照研究的合并效应量,这些研究有适合荟萃分析的数据,显示无关联(P = 0.99),使用随机效应模型时具有中等异质性(I² = 69.3%,P = 0.001)。
基于对被判定为高质量或中等质量研究的系统评价,有迹象表明某些营养因素似乎与儿童骨折风险增加有关。结果可能因选择偏倚、饮食报告偏倚或残余混杂而被夸大。关于该主题需要更多高质量的纵向观察性或干预性研究。